(1 week, 1 day ago)
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I beg to move,
That this House has considered rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Dr Huq. I have done so many times, and it is always a pleasure to be here and to see you fully in control. It is also a pleasure to see the Minister in his place. I was hoping that it would be this Minister, so when he walked through the door, I was especially pleased to see him in person. By the way, I would have been pleased to see any Minister—I do not want to offend anybody. The shadow Minister, the hon. Member for Hinckley and Bosworth (Dr Evans), is in his place as well. He and I talked last night about this issue.
This debate is, by its very nature, a niche debate. Dr Huq, if you have a constituent who has an autoimmune rheumatic disease or you know somebody with one, you will be here to represent them, but not everybody has, because only a small number of people across the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland have one of these diseases. However, I look forward very much to having the debate.
I was chatting beforehand to the Liberal Democrat spokesperson, the hon. Member for Mid Sussex (Alison Bennett), and she was telling me—she will refer to this herself when the time comes—of the important case of her constituent, a good friend. I will leave it to the hon. Lady to put forward that case.
I have always had a deep interest in any health issues. I am my party’s health spokesperson, and if there are any health debates anywhere, in Westminster Hall or in the main Chamber, I make it my business to attend those debates and to contribute to them, whether by speeches or questions. That is really important. I have a particular interest in rare diseases, and that came through a constituent who lives down the Ards peninsula. I have probably known him all his life. When you get to my age, Dr Huq, there are many people you have known all their lives; that is just a fact. The point is that he married a young girl from the area. She had a rare disease, and my interest came through contact between her and the family and me across the Ards peninsula. Across Strangford, this became a massive issue, and that lady and that family today fly the flag for rare diseases in the Ards peninsula and in Strangford.
I thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting this debate. I think we start from the NHS point of view. I am an advocate for the NHS—always have been and always will be—as we all are in this House. I am one who believes in the foundation of our NHS and the people who hold it together—the people whom we may not meet, but who are the glue and the gel that keeps it going and keeps it together. I am aware of the stress and strain on the NHS, and give my full support as the Government attempt to make the changes that are necessary for the NHS to survive. I very much welcome the Government’s commitment. I think they have committed £26.3 billion to the NHS, and that is a massive contribution. It shows confidence on the part of the Government; we welcome that. My starting position is praise for the people behind those three little letters, N-H-S.
We are beginning to look at NHS restructuring—the Secretary of State has confirmed that, and the Ministers are all committed to it. There are lots of priorities that the Government have to get to, but amongst that is the restructuring. A vital component is that the NHS provides high-quality, equitable care for all people, regardless of how rare or complex their condition is. If you—when I say “you”, Dr Huq, I really mean me or anyone else across the United Kingdom—do not have a rare disease, you may not understand what it means to have one, and how rare or complex a particular condition is, but that tells me that we need to be aware of this issue. We need to reach out and we need to help. The Government have a commitment to rare diseases as well. Although they may not be mathematically or statistically numerous, they represent individuals, families—relatives—and friends, who all understand the issue very well.
I have been interested in rare diseases since I was in the Northern Ireland Assembly, before I came here. We had contact with ladies down the Ards peninsula who were very much aware of rare diseases and the issues, so we started a rare diseases group in the Assembly, which we have continued here over the years. I will use this opportunity to speak on their behalf about some complex, rare diseases—rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases.
I congratulate my hon. Friend on securing the debate. Does he agree that because so few people are impacted by rare diseases, raising awareness among health professionals is a key aspect of helping those people, who may often feel overlooked simply because of the very small number who come into the ambit of the subject matter we are discussing?
As my hon. Friend often does in these debates, he brings forward a reminder of why this debate is important and why we need to raise awareness. It is about giving confidence to people out there who may have these diseases and may think that they are fighting this battle all on their own, but are not. We need to raise awareness among NHS staff. It is impossible to know about every rare disease, but it is good to recognise the symptoms and to be able to point people in the right direction.
Rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases are a range of chronic, currently incurable conditions in which the body’s immune system damages its own tissues, often in multiple organs throughout the body simultaneously. That is a lot of words but, to use a phrase that we would say back home, it means that they come at a person from all sides. They can lead to tissue or organ damage that, in some cases, can be fatal. We cannot ignore the fact that that can be fatal and the importance of responding in a positive fashion.
At present, the outcomes are not good enough for people living with rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases: they wait too long for a diagnosis, have variable access to specialist care and cannot always access help and support when they need it. In any debate that we have about ill health, we often say that early diagnosis is important, but so is having access to specialist care. It is important that NHS workers are able to notice something that may be unusual and not something that they see every day. It is also important that the care, help and support that people need is available when they need it. Preliminary data from the Rare Autoimmune Rheumatic Disease Alliance’s soon-to-be-released 2024 patient survey found that the average time to diagnose from symptom onset was two and a half years—it is that long before anything happens. In those two and a half years, people suffer, worry themselves sick and wonder, “Am I going to get out the other side?” The data shows that 30% of patients waited five years for a diagnosis from symptom onset.
Rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases impact on around 170,000 people in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Hon. Members may not recognise some of the diseases, but they include Behçet's disease, lupus, myositis, scleroderma, Sjögren’s syndrome and vasculitis. They can affect many parts of the body—the joints, the skin, the lungs, the kidneys or the heart—and often require cross-medical expertise. That is just a small number of the things that come the way of 170,000 people across the United Kingdom. Unlike the vast majority of rare diseases, the conditions occur predominantly in adult life and are predominantly non-genetic. That means that people do not need to have a history of them: they can come out of the blue.
The Rare Autoimmune Rheumatic Disease Alliance, a group made up of clinicians and charities, such as Lupus UK, Vasculitis UK, Scleroderma & Raynaud’s UK and Sjögren’s UK, has set out a number of key solutions to improve care for RAIRDs. They include strengthening existing specialised networks and setting out what good care looks like through a rare disease equality standard. It has also stressed that it is vital that rare disease is not forgotten in upcoming policies such as the NHS’s 10-year plan, which I will refer to later. In that plan, it is really important that we—by which I mean the Government and the Minister—can give hope to people who suffer from those diseases, and it is really important that they do not think they are on their own. The evidential base response from the Minister would give them that assurance, and it is important that the progress made to date by the UK rare diseases framework is built on. That is my first question: is the rare diseases framework part of the NHS 10-year plan?
I want to share an example that has been highlighted to me of someone who has felt the personal impact of rare autoimmune rheumatic disease. Zoi lives with a life-threatening RAIRD, granulomatosis with polyangiitis vasculitis. In her words, she is “lucky” because she had a relatively short journey to diagnosis. When she looks at others, she thinks she is lucky. I would like everybody who suffers from these diseases to have the same luck—if luck is the word. I do not believe in luck; my personal opinion is that everything is predestined. I am interested in how we make it better.
The quick diagnosis came only because Zoi’s GP recognised her symptoms and knew to refer her right away. Does every doctor have that knowledge? I hope they have, but they might not have the personal observation of that doctor. The difference was that he had had a friend who had died of the disease, so he knew what to look out for and red-lighted those symptoms.
Despite Zoi’s positive experience of diagnosis, however, her experience of care since has been variable—that is the second stage. Following diagnosis of the disease, the care system works its way out. She has faced long waits for appointments and poor communication between teams responsible for her care. In one instance, she received a letter from a consultant four months after the date of the appointment. Was that the fault of the Royal Mail? I do not know. It was not Zoi’s fault that she did not know about the appointment until it was too late. It meant that she had been taking a medication unnecessarily for months longer than needed.
It is about early diagnosis, treatment going forward and speed and urgency in the process to make it happen. Zoi works for a charity that supports other people living with vasculitis. She describes it as “heartbreaking” that hers is one of the best diagnostic journeys one will hear of. She has been diagnosed and gone through the NHS process to get out the other side and try to be better. As she says, hers is one of the best diagnostic journeys, but how can the rest be improved?
How do we improve care? Speedy diagnosis should not be down to Zoi’s word “luck”. People such as Zoi living with serious rare diseases should be able to access vital care when they need it. That is why I am calling on the Minister to consider the following recommendations advocated by RAIRDA. It is important to be aware of the issues.
The first recommendation is to ensure that rare diseases are a focus of the NHS 10-year plan. I am always pleased to see the Minister in his place. I mean that genuinely, not to give the Minister a big head. He comes with an understanding that we all greatly appreciate— I do and am sure everybody else does. Will there be a focus in the 10-year plan on rare diseases? I am pretty sure the answer will be yes, but we need confirmation of that in Hansard today. We need to reassure our constituents who are struggling with disease and are unsure what the future means for them.
The UK rare diseases framework, introduced just three years ago in 2021, has been a significant step forward in securing equity of treatment for rare diseases. I welcome that, but sometimes the system does not work as well as it should. It is crucial that the Government do not lose sight of the work done to date to drive change for people living with rare conditions. Good work has been done, and I always like to recognise good work. It is important that we give encouragement to those who are working hard, and it is important sometimes to think, when we are ploughing away, what we are getting for it. Many of us—all of us in this room, for instance—appreciate what our NHS does. The good work that has happened for those with rare conditions needs to continue with the same zest, enthusiasm and fervour as it has done in the past.
It is particularly important that the working groups on the NHS 10-year health plan consider how improvements in rare disease care will be championed in that plan. In addition, it is important that the plan considers how the work plan of the UK rare diseases framework will be continued past the framework’s end point in 2026. That is my second ask. I am sure that within the 10-year plan the Government are committed to that continuation, but I need to personally reassure my constituents and we need to reassure the nation. We need to reassure those 170,000 individuals and their families and friends.
The framework has been an important tool in co-ordinating methods to improve care for rare diseases, and not just in England. I understand that health is a devolved matter, but this is how it works: whatever happens here, health-wise, is the next stage for us back in Northern Ireland, through the Health Minister. I was talking to another Health Minister on the tube coming here, and we were saying how important that co-ordination across all four regions is. It is good to push for that here, and to see it received back home.
The framework has been an important tool in co-ordinating methods to improve care for rare diseases, not just in England but across the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The numbers of people suffering in Northern Ireland may seem small numerically, because we are a region of 1.9 million people, but the impact is huge. I am overtly aware that health is a devolved matter, but I am also aware that the standard can and should be UK-wide. The Minister always gives me and those from other parts of this great United Kingdom reassurance on the co-ordination between here and the Northern Ireland Assembly. I know he has met the Health Minister, Mike Nesbitt, and I am sure they will meet again in the foreseeable future.
How do we develop a standard of care? The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence quality standards consist of defined, measurable statements that can be audited to reduce variations in cases throughout the country. A rare disease quality standard would help to incentivise an increased focus on delivering high-quality care and treatment for rare conditions in the NHS, including rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases. That is my third ask: to develop the standard of care we need to have a quality standard, which would help to incentivise all the regions—all the parts of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland collectively; better together.
Work in this area is already well under way. RAIRDA has been working hard with organisations across the rare disease community to understand what good care looks like for people living with rare disease, and how that should be reflected in quality statements. Has the Minister had the opportunity to talk to the alliance? I am sure he has; I do not doubt that for a second. It would be good to have that liaison to help to bring together the ideas from the alliance and the Government. It is important that the current work to develop quality statements is built on in a timely way, with the swift development of a rare disease quality standard.
On my fourth request, it is clear that we need development in IT capacity in the fight for diagnosis, to ensure that more people can experience a quick diagnosis, like Zoi did. We need to increase funding for research into the diagnostic journey for rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases, to aid the development of diagnostic technology. It is really important that we look towards the next stage on research and development. How do we do that?
To sidestep slightly, today’s paper—I think it was the Express—said that the Government should be doing something to look at dementia as the numbers rise. Although we are talking about rare diseases that will be well down the Government’s to-do list, early diagnosis is important, as is research and development to improve the capacity to find a cure, to lessen the pain and to lengthen the time that people have in this world. Again, any indication of what is happening with research and development would be greatly appreciated.
Investment in research would help to identify blockers to rapid diagnosis, as well as supporting the development of digital tools for faster and more accurate diagnoses. Some months ago my colleague, the hon. and learned Member for North Antrim (Jim Allister), asked the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care a question in the Chamber about the report on the way forward for the NHS. He mentioned the need for digital data tools, and the Secretary of State replied very positively, so I think the Government are looking into this, but it is important that we have the digital tools in place. With better data and more accuracy, we can help to speed up the process and find a better way forward.
Because of their rarity, it is unrealistic to expect every hospital to have clinicians with expert knowledge of rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases. I understand that, as we cannot know everything. Clinicians may have a small portion of knowledge, but this subject requires expert knowledge, so we need another way of doing it. A 2024 survey found that 29% of respondents were not very, or not at all, confident that the specialist healthcare professionals providing their care understood their condition. How do we improve that? I understand that we are in difficult, financially straitened times, and the Government have rightly committed a large sum of money to the NHS and health services—as they should, and I support that entirely—but we need improvement. My fifth ask of the Minister is: how can we do better? If 29% of respondents are not very confident, or not at all confident, we need to address that.
I believe that improvement can be achieved by developing specialised networks for rare autoimmune rheumatic conditions. Such networks would allow health professionals to access the knowledge and expertise of tertiary specialists, while also developing the capability and capacity to provide more care and treatment locally. I feel that would be the answer to my fifth question, and I am interested to hear the Minister’s thoughts.
Networks already exist, with an excellent example being the Eastern Network for Rare Autoimmune Disease, established in 2016. We have a system in place, so let us look at it—not in a judgmental way—to see what it is doing and where improvements can be made. The network was formed to maximise patient access to relevant expertise while keeping their care as close to home as possible. This has been achieved by setting up excellent communication and cascading training to enable much better co-ordination, digital data sharing and contact between specialised centres and local trusts.
The network lead has calculated that the network’s creation has saved the NHS money, so it has to be considered. The network runs at a cost of between £70,000 and £100,000, but it has generated annual savings estimated at between £150,000 and £200,000. That means that for every £1 spent, the NHS has saved £2, over a seven-year period, through a reduction in the use of inappropriate high-cost drugs.
On my sixth ask, networks throughout the country, like ENRAD, are run on the good will of clinicians. That is not sustainable, and it never can be. I respectfully ask the Minister to perhaps look at the ENRAD scheme, which is run on the good will of clinicians and has been very effective in how it responds, to see how such networks can be better helped to expand. If it saves money—if every £1 saves the NHS £2—then the financial equation is clear, and it should be pursued across all of this great United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
To address this issue, the Government must provide the necessary financial support for networks to be developed and maintained. That funding would enable the creation of vital posts, such as meeting co-ordinators, and allow clinicians to be reimbursed for their time. Again, I feel that would be the right incentive. Good will is good to have, and there is much of it across this great nation, but, at the same time, there may be better ways of doing things. Such support would ensure that benefits for patients, and the NHS’s budget, could be realised throughout the country. With the £25.3 billion committed to the NHS—I think that is the figure, but the Minister will correct me if I am wrong—this is another way to save money in the NHS, and it really should be done.
My last request is about specialist nurses, who can play a crucial role in supporting people living with rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases. The preliminary results from the 2024 survey show that respondents with access to a specialist nurse were more likely to report that they had access to enough information and support about their condition, compared with those who did not have any access to a specialist nurse. But less than three in 10 respondents—some 28%—had accessed information from a specialist nurse, and this varied widely by condition group. Wow: how important is the role of specialist nurses? I would be reassured if the Minister came back to me in respect of the critical role they play, perhaps exclusively. If only 28% of people have access to information from a specialist nurse and it should be more, what can be done to improve that?
Finally, when developing the NHS workforce plans, will the Minister consider what more can be done to recruit more specialist nurses to support people with rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases? We must always consider the fact that although the chances of getting a rare disease may be one in 10,000, the reality is that the patient deserves all the help we can offer, from diagnosis to treatment and support. I ask the Minister—very kindly, sincerely and humbly—to clarify whether that is this Government’s goal. I believe that it is, but it is not about me today; it is about the people we represent in this House, collectively, together, across this great nation. I believe we have an important role to play.
RAIRDA, with all the clinicians and all the charities, has brought together some positive ideas that can help us together. This is not about blame—it is is never, ever about blame; it is about how we do it better. On behalf of my constituents who have contacted me, and others who will speak shortly, and for the shadow Minister and the Minister, we put forward our case and look forward to support from Government.
I remind Members that they should bob if they want to be called in the debate.
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Dr Huq. I thank the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) for bringing this issue before us today, because it is one of those subjects that does not get the attention that it needs. It is really important to tease out some of the issues, because there is a danger that they could be forgotten if we do not. The hon. Gentleman pushes this matter time and again.
The whole question of rare autoimmune rheumatic disease needs to be set in the context of the wider issue of rare diseases, which are conditions that affect less than one in 2,000 people. There are 7,000 rare diseases, affecting one in 17 people, which is 3.5 million people. They can be of a genetic or non-genetic origin and they affect adults and children. Some 75% of rare diseases affect children and more than 30% of children with a rare disease die before their fifth birthday. That is a sobering statistic.
We have to put the issue into that context: it affects the lives of so many people, not just those who are directly affected by the particular disease, but their family members and friends. A disease can also have an impact on someone’s work-life balance and their job, as well as more broadly. There are challenges, but I thank the Rare Autoimmune Rheumatic Disease Alliance for bringing those groups together to push for this issue. It believes, as we all do, that getting together gives us more strength. I support that, and I have no doubt that the Minister supports that too.
We do not want rare diseases, particularly this type of disease, to be left at the back of the queue. The Government acknowledge that, so I am not pointing the finger at them, or at health professionals. Many people with this type of disease say that they do not get the support they need, but they do not blame individual clinicians, practitioners or healthcare workers; they blame the system in so far as it does not bring those professionals together in, for example, the clinical networks that the hon. Member for Strangford referred to. This is not a finger-pointing exercise, but it is important that where we can identify, and have identified, problems in the system, it is our responsibility to try to fix those problems.
The hon. Gentleman also touched on the need for defined, measurable and identified standards to reduce inequalities in healthcare provision. RAIRDA is working with others to set out key statements that it believes will form the quality standards for the future. It has set out the challenges, such as the challenge of focusing on this issue and the points that the hon. Gentleman raised that the time from symptoms to diagnosis can be from two and a half years to as much as five years, and potentially beyond.
There is also a challenge with access to specialist knowledge and expertise, and the hon. Gentleman’s valid point, which I repeat, about the need for those specialist networks. There is the challenge of getting support out to the people—the professionals—dealing with our constituents in one way fashion or another. I know the UK rare diseases framework, and the England rare diseases action plan in my case, has been trying to help patients to get a diagnosis faster but we need to do more.
There has been a push to raise awareness among professionals, but we need to do more there. We need better co-ordination of care and improved access to specialist care, treatment and drugs. We also need to focus on the needs of the various nations. Although they all face similar problems, it is important to have a focus at a national and potentially regional level.
I support the hon. Gentleman, who made important points. We will no doubt come back to this issue. I know that the Minister will respond, as he always does, constructively and positively, so I look forward to hearing what he and Members from other parties have to say. I will finish by saying to the hon. Gentleman that at no point during my contribution did I mention either Shakespeare or Sophocles.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Dr Huq. I thank the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) for bringing forward this debate on a subject that all too often does not get enough attention, but that is important and affects millions of people. I also thank the hon. Member for Bootle (Peter Dowd) for his contribution.
More than 160,000 people in the UK live with rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases. Identifying, treating and caring for those people is complex. Yesterday, my constituent Carrie told me about her experience. She suffers from a number of conditions and has done since she was diagnosed 30 years ago. Interestingly, for someone who has carried those conditions for 30 years, she considers herself fortunate to have been diagnosed with Raynaud’s and lupus at a young age, because it allowed her to start treatment early and receive consistent care. She knows from experience that early diagnosis and treatment makes a real difference, a point that has already been made by hon. Members.
While Carrie believes that she has been lucky and has received good care, she stressed that many people face years of misdiagnosis or dismissal, and poor or almost non-existent care. Those failures only exacerbate their symptoms further down the line. Sadly, one of those less fortunate than Carrie is her own mother, who lives not in Sussex but in Yorkshire, and also has multiple autoimmune conditions. Contrastingly, however, she has always been made to feel like a hypochondriac—not an unusual experience for those seeking help with rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases.
Carrie’s mother was eventually diagnosed after many unnecessary years of suffering. She suffered for longer and to a greater degree simply because no one believed her or was able to diagnose her. Carrie told me that a postcode lottery exists in the quality of care for those with these conditions. It really is down to the specific medics and practitioners who an individual meets as to how well their condition is identified and whether treatment can begin.
Carrie’s Raynaud’s is particularly debilitating in winter. She told me that more awareness of the issues around the conditions and how symptoms can be alleviated is vital. Often, solutions can be as simple as helping with buying things such as thermal gloves or socks.
Another major challenge has been the impact of her autoimmune conditions on her teeth, particularly with the Sjögren’s that she suffers from. Carrie has spent thousands and thousands of pounds on private dental care over the years—the only option as NHS treatment was not available. Despite that money, Carrie now thinks that it is not long until she will have very few teeth left.
Carrie thinks that the current system is disjointed, with her dentist not understanding the issues surrounding her conditions, and her rheumatologist likewise not understanding the impact her conditions have on her dental health. She believes that a more co-ordinated, multidisciplinary approach to treating the conditions would help. It is clear from my conversation with Carrie that we simply must do better on this issue.
We must tackle the postcode lottery, exemplified by Carrie and her mother at opposite ends of the country; build a more joined-up system; and take rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases seriously so that we can start diagnosing earlier and more consistently. While the problems seem daunting, I believe that by collaborating—for example, with organisations such as RAIRDA—we can find solutions to the problems that Carrie told me about.
It is already Liberal Democrat policy to ensure that everyone with long-term health conditions has access to a named GP. We must also do better on dentistry, both generally, by sorting out the NHS contract and ensuring that we have a proper workforce plan for dentistry, and specifically, for people with those rare diseases that have a massive impact on dental health. As well as having access to a named GP, the Liberal Democrats are campaigning for the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency to have greater capacity, which would help to speed up the process by which new treatments reach patients—a potential game changer for those suffering with such conditions.
We need change so that we can help the people living with those complex, long-term and debilitating conditions. The diseases may be complex, but I believe the solutions need not be. I am encouraged by the words of hon. Members today, and together, we can effect the change that Carrie, her mother and so many others need and deserve.
I call the shadow Minister, the hon. Member for Hinckley and Bosworth (Dr Evans), to speak for His Majesty’s loyal Opposition.
It is a pleasure to serve under your leadership, Dr Huq, and thank you for the introduction.
I thank the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) for his detailed canter through a subject that needs to be highlighted. He hit the nail on the head in relation to improving clinical pathways. We, as a House, need to think about the best way to do that, and to help the NHS to do that. He exemplified that by telling Zoi’s story.
As the hon. Member for Bootle (Peter Dowd) rightly highlighted, the impact on patients is the crux of the matter, which was also personified by the hon. Member for Mid Sussex (Alison Bennett) with her story about Carrie—what she and her mother have to go through, and the difficulties they are living and breathing every single day. The co-ordination of care is so important. The hon. Member for East Londonderry (Mr Campbell), who is no longer in his place, made a timely and pointed intervention about clinicians, awareness and training.
Being a clinician, and bringing that experience to the House, I believe it is difficult to identify the issues because they are often masked by other conditions. A random screening test may conclude rheumatoid factor, anti-CCP antibodies, ESR, CRP, ANA, ANCA, and even anti-ro and anti-la. All those may be positive or negative, and can be indicative of, but not definitive about, some of those conditions. That is part of the problem we have with those rare diseases. With 170,000 people affected, they are uncommon but common enough for us to see them. I certainly have treated several patients with conditions such as systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögren’s or Raynaud’s.
When we think about these conditions, we need to break them into two distinct groups: the connective tissue disorders, such as lupus, scleroderma, myositis and Sjögren’s, and vasculitis disorders, such as ANCA-associated vasculitis, giant cell arteritis and Behçet’s. By their nature, because they are rare, they are hard to diagnose. I hope that in the future, we may well have artificial intelligence to help clinicians to identify, or at least to think about, the differential diagnosis when it comes to dealing with those patients.
It is a broad and difficult topic to break down, so it will be helpful to look in turn at the framework to address rare diseases, the research behind it, the diagnosis, the workforce, and, finally, the treatment. A framework to help the approach is important, so under the previous Government, the UK rare diseases framework was published in 2021 to set out a vision to improve the care for people with rare diseases. It set out four priorities: delivering early diagnosis, increasing awareness among health professionals, improving access to a specialist team and providing co-ordinated care. In essence, that is the care pathway.
The framework was designed to improve the speed of diagnosis, the co-ordination of care and the access to treatment. As RAIRDA said:
“The UK rare disease framework (2021) has been a significant step in securing equity of treatment for rare diseases, and going forwards, it is crucial that the Government does not lose sight of the work done to date to drive changes for people living with rare conditions.”
Therefore, I ask the Minister my first question: how do the Government intend to build on the UK rare diseases framework to ensure that it remains adequately funded and relevant?
Next, we need the research, and that is the hardest part. As I mentioned, some of the tests cannot even diagnose conditions such as Behçet’s syndrome; it is often a clinical diagnosis. The establishment of the Genomics England project, further mapping the genetic codes of individuals with rare conditions, was a move hailed by researchers worldwide. The programme, although ostensibly broad, directly benefits patients with rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases by identifying genetic markers and enabling targeted treatments. My second question to the Minister is: what progress has been made in expanding genetic research to uncover new treatment options for such diseases?
Earlier this year, the Government published an action plan that includes significant new commitments against each of those four framework priorities, including the health inequalities that we have heard so expertly talked about today. The action plan highlighted the significant investment in driving research on the diseases, including £14 million to the Rare Disease Research UK platform. That facilitates greater collaboration between academics, clinical and industry research, as well as people living with rare diseases, research charities and other stakeholders to try to accelerate the understanding, diagnosis and therapy of these diseases. I was pleased to stand on a manifesto commitment to take forward the rare disease action plan.
I fully accept that more needs to be done, and the new Government must work closely with their delivery partners on the matter. I was pleased that in a recent written response, the Government reiterated their support for research into rare diseases. They further highlighted that the Department for Health and Social Care has invested £2.2 million to enable the National Institute of Health and Care Research to carry out research programmes related to rare genetic diseases, and of course the £340 million to Genomics England.
I did my medical training at the University of Birmingham medical school, which has the University of Birmingham Centre for Rare Disease Studies, a collaboration to try to pull together all the academic research. That is translational research. As we keep saying, these diseases are rare so, by definition, to do the trials, we need to have a wide pool to pull people together to try to work things out. I hope the hon. Member for Strangford will be interested in the fact that that university has joined with the Queen’s University Belfast to research and collaborate across the four nations, including with Newcastle University. In 2015, I had the privilege of visiting that centre, and this is a note for him to look into that. Will the Government continue to increase funding specifically for rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases, especially within the Medical Research Council’s care for rare disease programme?
Then we need to look at workforce and testing capacity. Over the last few years, the Government have allocated £2.3 billion to community diagnostic centres, of which there are almost 170 across the country. Those are really important for doing blood tests, ultrasounds, MRI scans and CT scans. In my constituency, I am lucky enough to have had £24 million invested; one is being built as we speak. That is revolutionary for our area, because for too long people had to travel to the likes of the George Eliot Medical Centre or to Leicester. Now they can have these tests in their community, providing swifter access. I hope that that will help people like Zoi, about whom we have heard, by making sure that she is one of the lucky ones who gets swift access.
Within that, we also need the people who can do the tests and understand the specialisms, so will the Minister tell us whether the Government will be expanding the network of CDCs any further? On staffing, the last Government brought forward the NHS workforce plan. How are this Government looking at addressing rheumatology and radiology in that plan to make sure there are no gaps?
Treatment is the one thing we are looking for. We have the diagnosis, but we need the treatment. Innovative drugs are coming, including immunotherapies, but they often come with high price tags. NICE is looking at how to speed things up, but will the Government commit to accelerating the processes so that we can make sure people get these innovative drugs as quickly as possible? We should not forget that standard drugs are used as well, including methotrexate. They can be quite dangerous, so I ask the Government what they are doing to ensure safe use of such drugs. Disease-modifying medications are important, but they can have high toxicity if not used properly, so they can cause harm. Safety is really important.
The previous Government’s legacy is one of frameworks being established, investment being made and a road to improve lives. For the 2024 general election, RAIRDA published a manifesto that called on the Government to ensure that rare diseases remain a priority, to develop a quality standard for rare diseases and to develop better support for specialist networks. How will the Government work to consider and address those points? I hope this debate has highlighted exactly those calls, because we unanimously agree that this is what we need: research, networks, support and treatments for the individuals who are suffering.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Dr Huq. I thank the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon)—I want to call him an hon. Friend because he is a friend, but convention dictates that I must call him an hon. Member—and I welcome the fact that he cares so much about health-related issues. I now see him more than I see my wife, because he is always in debates about a whole range of health conditions, and he brings so much passion to those debates. Importantly, he highlights rare diseases. I thank him for the way he made his case this morning, and for speaking about Zoi’s experience. When we humanise these things, we make them all the more impactful.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Bootle (Peter Dowd) for his contributions, and I thank the Liberal Democrat spokesperson, the hon. Member for Mid Sussex (Alison Bennett), for humanising the issue through Carrie’s story; that is crucial. The shadow Minister, the hon. Member for Hinckley and Bosworth (Dr Evans), brings his professional experience to this debate, and that cannot be underestimated. I confess that I am not a medical professional, but in health debates it is important to listen to the expertise of those who work in the sector and on the frontline. I thank him genuinely for the way he has approached the debate. This is not a party political, knockabout debate; it is something on which we all want to see progress. The beauty of Westminster Hall is that we can leave the knockabout to the main Chamber, and in this room we can get into the detail of important subjects that are often overlooked. I pay tribute to those who are affected by rare disease, including rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases, and to their families.
The work of patient organisations such as RAIRDA is vital in raising awareness and campaigning to improve the lives of people who are living with rare diseases, and I thank those who dedicate their lives to this community. It is important to make the point that although rare diseases are individually rare, they are collectively common. One in 17 people will be affected by a rare condition over their lifetime. People living with rare diseases may face additional challenges in accessing health and social care. As the hon. Member for Mid Sussex said, this applies to a whole range of health services, including dentistry, and I hope that the Minister responsible for dentistry will pick that up. I will ensure that he receives her comments, because dentistry is often overlooked when it comes to people with rare conditions.
We are committed to improving the lives of people who are living with rare conditions. As the hon. Member for Strangford mentions, the UK rare diseases framework outlines four priorities to achieve this aim: helping patients to get a final diagnosis faster; increasing awareness of rare diseases among healthcare professionals; bettering co-ordination of care; and improving access to specialist care, treatments and drugs. Rare diseases are a priority for the Government. In England, we publish a rare diseases action plan annually, which details the specific steps we are taking to meet the shared priorities of the framework. Each action has an owner, desired outcomes and detail about how we will measure and report on progress. This Government are committed to delivering on the priorities framework, and we are working to publish the next England action plan in early 2025.
The UK rare diseases framework comes to an end in 2026, and I know that the rare disease community would like the policy to continue, to maintain the momentum and progress made over the lifetime of the previous framework. It is UK-wide and agreed across the devolved nations, and I am more than happy to discuss it further with colleagues in Wales and Scotland and, for the hon. Member for Strangford, with Mike Nesbitt, the Health Minister in Northern Ireland. I am the UK Health Minister with responsibility for engagement with the devolved Administrations when it comes to health and social care; indeed, we have a meeting with them and with the Secretary of State tomorrow to discuss a whole range of subjects. I am more than happy to discuss this issue further with colleagues to see if we can maintain four-nation co-ordination in this area. I believe that if we can do so, we should. I give the hon. Member for Strangford my commitment that I will take the matter up with the devolved Health Ministers to see if we can continue the four-nation approach.
In England, I am committed to working towards the four priorities of the framework, which were identified through the 2019 national conversation on rare diseases. Alongside the evaluation of England’s rare disease action plans commissioned through NIHR, the Department will undertake engagement next year to inform future policy decisions. The Government are committed to providing the best diagnosis and care for rare diseases, as set out in the UK rare diseases framework. Good diagnosis should be timely and accurate, and I know that people living with rare diseases often face journeys that are years long—diagnostic odysseys—before they receive an answer.
As the shadow Minister set out, many health professionals are involved in a patient’s journey, from those in specialist testing and genetic screening to GPs and primary care professionals. Raising awareness of rare conditions among those professionals is one way in which we can help to speed up diagnosis. I know that every experience of living with a rare disease is unique, and, with more than 7,000 identified rare diseases, we focus on addressing shared challenges across all rare diseases.
Although the increasing use of genetic testing is an groundbreaking tool in diagnosis, many conditions, including rare rheumatic autoimmune diseases, do not have an identified genetic component, so it is important that overall awareness, diagnostics and quality of care continue to serve all people living with rare conditions. NHS England is working to improve awareness of rare diseases among healthcare professionals, including those in primary care, through the NHS England genomics education programme, which includes non-genetic rare diseases. The GEP provides education and training to support the specialist and wider workforce to diagnose rare conditions early and to know how to deliver the best possible care for patients and families—the shadow Minister mentioned that. Working with partners such as Medics 4 Rare Diseases, the GEP has created genomic notes for clinicians, GeNotes, an innovative digital educational resource for healthcare professionals. The GEP works to provide information to GPs where and when they need it—for example, by presenting at primary care educational events, producing blended learning modules for GP trainees or ensuring regular reviews of the curriculum of the Royal College of General Practitioners.
The shadow Minister rightly mentioned research. I reassure him that the Department of Health and Social Care—this started on the previous Government’s watch, and we rightly are continuing the progress—supports research into rare diseases through the NIHR. The NIHR is the nation’s largest funder of health and care research, and it welcomes funding applications for research into any aspect of human health, including rare diseases. The usual practice of the NIHR and other research funders is not to ringfence funds for expenditure on particular topics. The “Rare Diseases Research Landscape Project Report” described investment of almost £630 million from MRC and NIHR programmes in rare disease research over five years. We are now working with the rare diseases community to further understand the gaps and the priorities, and to get them into those research pathways so that we can, we hope, fill the gaps.
As many rare diseases are chronic and affect multiple body systems, those living with rare disease face complex condition management, and interact with many specialists and providers of health and social care. That can include travelling across the country to access highly specialised care from experts. All of that can add up to a significant emotional and physical burden, and deepens existing inequalities. Co-ordination of care is essential to ensure that care is effectively managed, that the burden on patients and their carers is minimised and that healthcare professionals are working together to provide the best possible joined-up and high-quality care.
Last year, we hosted a workshop with RAIRDA to explore how best to support people living with “non-genetic” rare diseases. That highlighted the importance of specialised networks of care in delivering high-quality care at value for money. As we heard from the hon. Member for Strangford, networks, such as the Eastern Network for Rare Autoimmune Disease, are an example of best practice. I encourage integrated care boards to consider similar models across the whole country for types of rare diseases. I am more than happy to look closely at how we can seek to spread that best practice across the country, across different rare disease types and across ICBs, because patients with rare conditions deserve the same quality, safety and efficacy in medicines as other patients with more common conditions.
NICE, the MHRA and NHS England are working to understand and to address challenges preventing treatments for rare conditions from reaching patients who need them. I take on board precisely the points that the shadow Minister raises about the new drugs, how we ensure faster access and how we create the environment whereby clinical trials are more readily available in the United Kingdom. I want to assure Members that that is a central part not just of our health mission but of the Government’s economic mission, because we want the United Kingdom to be a base for investment in life sciences, in medtech and in access to clinical trials, so that our patients win as well as our economy. We have to ensure that safety is foremost in our deliberations. Safety is paramount, and we must ensure, in whatever regulatory regime that we have to encourage the life sciences, medtech and data industries into the UK, that safety is never compromised. I take on board fully the comments made by the shadow Minister.
NICE has also been working with RAIRDA to create a quality standard for rare diseases. That will find commonalities across the more than 7,000 identified rare diseases to develop standards that will drive quality improvement across multiple rare disease groups. Although the majority of rare diseases are genetic, others, such as rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases, do not yet have an identified genetic cause, as I said. A study by Genetic Alliance UK suggests that such conditions often have higher prevalence, impacting on a significant number of people, so it is important that both genetic and non-genetic conditions are considered.
Approximately 3.5 million people in the UK live with a rare condition, and addressing shared challenges across all conditions will be central to this Government’s approach. In addition, shared challenges across the health and social care system are often exacerbated for people living with rare diseases, such as access to mental health support—something else that the hon. Member for Mid Sussex mentioned. A central mission of this Government is to build a health and care system fit for the future.
The hon. Member for Strangford referred to our 10-year health plan. I reassure the House that that is intended to focus on the three shifts needed to deliver a modern NHS—not just fixing our NHS, but making it fit for the future, for the next 10, 20 or 30 years, putting it on a modernised footing as well as fixing the fundamentals. The three shifts are moving from hospital to community, from analogue to digital and from sickness to prevention. Those shifts offer opportunities to improve time to diagnosis and care for people living with rare diseases. Many highly specialised services for rare diseases must be delivered in hospitals to ensure the high standards of expert care that we want to see, but we can improve co-ordination of care to deliver better treatments closer to where people live, where possible. While many rare diseases are not preventable, early diagnosis can lead to interventions that improve health outcomes.
On the point made by the shadow Minister about community diagnostic centres, the Government’s commitment is to continue that programme. Indeed, I have seen the benefits of it myself—I got to open the new CDC at Crownpoint in Denton in my constituency in July. It is already having a game-changing impact on the local community, giving faster diagnosis and getting people into treatment more quickly, with better outcomes and better patient experiences for those who access the facilities.
The 10-year plan will ensure a better health service for everyone, regardless of condition or service area. On 21 October, we launched a national conversation on the future of the NHS, inviting views from across the country on how to deliver a health service fit for the future. Patients, staff and organisations can make themselves heard by logging on to the online portal, change.nhs.uk. I encourage hon. Members to do the same and to encourage their constituents to do likewise, if they have not done so already.
Unmet need remains, however, for people living with rare diseases, including rare autoimmune rheumatic conditions. I reaffirm that I am deeply committed, as is this Government, to working across the health and care system and with the rare disease community to address that need.
Finally, on workforce, the hon. Member for Strangford and other Members asked if the goal of the Government is to ensure that a patient gets the treatment, and that we get that treatment with the workforce we have. Getting that right workforce will be key. I reassure Members that the goal of the Government is to ensure that the patient, as they deserve, gets all the help that the NHS can offer in treatment, care and support.
The 10-year health plan will deliver those three big shifts on hospitals to community, analogue to digital, and sickness to prevention. To support delivery of the plan, the Secretary of State has confirmed that next summer we will refresh the NHS long-term workforce plan. That will help to ensure that the NHS has the right people in the right places with the right skills to deliver the care that patients need when they need it, not just today but in the future. The shifts we want to see in the delivery of healthcare will require us to rethink the kind of workforce we need in 10 years’ time.
I am grateful to the Minister for acknowledging the workforce, and for looking at the workforce plan. I was aware of the Health Secretary’s plan to revisit this, and the Minister talks about it being done next year. Does he have a timescale for how long the review will take? The danger, especially in healthcare, is that modernisation happens so quickly that, by the time we review something, it is already out of date and needs another review. This is always a chicken-and-egg situation. I would be grateful for a timescale.
We will refresh it next summer, and the Department is already beginning to think about whether this is what the shifts are intended to bring about, and whether these are the outcomes we want to see as a result of those shifts. If we are to have a neighbourhood health service that delivers much more in a community setting, how do we ensure we have the right skills and the right workforce to deliver that?
Particularly with the shift from analogue to digital, we will need a lot more tech-savvy clinicians, too. How do we build in some of the massive advances in artificial intelligence into medical devices and medical technology? We will be doing that concurrently with the 10-year plan to make sure that the workforce plan refresh is ready to go. This will allow us to embed the future, not just today’s practices, into the training and recruitment processes for the immediate future. The refresh will begin next summer, but it is a chicken-and-egg situation. We need to work out what the future of the NHS will look like, and then we have to ensure that we have the skills to meet that ambition—not just for today, but for the future.
In closing, I again thank my friend, the hon. Member for Strangford, for raising such an important matter, and I thank the rare diseases community for their continued and constructive engagement with the Government to help bring about meaningful change. I hope I have reassured the hon. Gentleman both on cross-UK working—and I take up his challenge to try to get colleagues across the devolved Administrations to agree to continue a UK-wide approach—and on my specific responsibility here in England. We will take forward the four areas identified in the UK plan. We will have a new plan for England, and we will seek to make the significant progress that I believe all Members of this House want to see happen.
I am more than happy to work collegiately with Members across the House, whose role is to scrutinise the Government, to hold our feet to the coals and to make sure we do what is in the plan at the best speed and pace for people living with these conditions. I also accept that I am not the sole fount of all wisdom in this area.
I know the shadow Minister is surprised by that. Genuinely, whatever people bring to the table, whether it is personal experience, professional expertise or their constituents’ stories, we need to share that knowledge so that we can improve how we deliver the outcomes we want to see for people living with rare diseases. I stand willing and ready to work with hon. Members across the House, and indeed with organisations that champion this area, so we can get the best outcomes that people deserve.
I thank all hon. Members for their contributions. I refer first of all to the hon. Member for Bootle (Peter Dowd). It is always a pleasure to hear him make his contribution. Even when there are things that are said in other debates which I may challenge, he always delivers his contribution in a lovely way and not many people can do that. Today he delivered something that we all agree with. I thank him for that and I mean that sincerely, but he knows that. He referred to the effect upon the family. He is right, and also right that those who want to work are not able to. He said he did not want to see these diseases at the back of the queue and he is right on that as well. All those things are pertinent to the debate.
My hon. Friend the Member for East Londonderry (Mr Campbell) referred to awareness and training. Again, a very salient intervention for which I thank him. The Minister is right that there is no better way of telling a story than giving an example, and the hon. Member for Mid Sussex (Alison Bennett) told of her good friend, Carrie, and the effect upon her and upon her mummy as well. Sometimes they were wondering what it was all about when the condition worsened, and how the health service responds is critically important.
The shadow Minister, the hon. Member for Hinckley and Bosworth (Dr Evans), brings to any debate his wealth of knowledge—from his own personal experience and from his vocation as well—and he does so sincerely. He referred to the two groups: those with tissue and those with vasculitis. He referred to the vision for the rare disease framework and the new action plan. I did not previously know about the tie-up between Birmingham, Newcastle and Queen’s University Belfast for research and development and I was really interested to hear about it. I know about some of the things Queen’s University do but I did not know about that specifically and so I thank him for that, and for the wee reminder of how to get onto that as well. That has really been helpful.
I am encouraged by what I have heard today. I referred to research networks and support, and working collectively to make this situation better. Disease modification drugs need to be regulated. This is a wee reminder of some of the things to be done—it is not always straightforward by the way, either.
This debate was never about me or about any of us here. It is about patients and our constituents; about those who we serve in this place. Today I think the Minister has developed a very positive response. All of those out there—my constituents, and those of the hon. Member for Mid Sussex and of the hon. Member for Hinckley and Bosworth—will be encouraged, because they will be listening to this debate and they will want to know what the Government are going to do. They will be encouraged by the things the Minister referred to: highlighting the rare diseases, the personal stories, to raise awareness. That the diseases are rare but collectively they are common was a salient and poignant comment. On measuring and reporting progress, he referred to the 2026 end of the framework but the Minister gave us assurance—he referred to a mission and to contacting the four nations so they can approach it together and commit together. I think that is also an answer to one of the questions I asked. That is what the Minister has committed himself to doing and we should be reassured by that.
Diagnosis should be timely and accurate, and the Minister referred to GeNotes and the digital improvements. That is really important as well. He also referred to NICE, to encourage research and development for rare diseases because we have to look forward to someday hopefully finding a solution. He also referred to the ENRAD, which is a good model for all to follow. Government will put this idea to the fore, where there has been a good example. The Minister is right about the economic and health commitment for clinical trials, so that our patients win each time. He also made encouraging comments about training and workforce—early prevention, faster diagnosis, better outcomes. I think those who have rare diseases—170,000 across this great United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and all the families of those people—will today be encouraged by this debate and the contributions from all sides. Most importantly, I say a sincere thank you to the Minister.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered rare autoimmune rheumatic diseases.