NHS England Update

Debate between Baroness Merron and Lord Turnberg
Wednesday 19th March 2025

(2 weeks, 1 day ago)

Lords Chamber
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Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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It will not affect commitments to women’s health. As we have said, women’s health remains a priority. The noble Baroness will know that there are some 600,000 women already on the gynaecology waiting list; that is far too long for women to wait. Women’s health hubs are part of the solution, and I continue to champion those with the integrated care boards.

Lord Turnberg Portrait Lord Turnberg (Lab)
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My Lords, I am delighted to support the direction of travel towards patients first. I wonder if there are savings to be made. We can concentrate on the gap in social care, where I suspect much of the NHS is so interdependent. Social care is so badly funded, and we need to do something there.

Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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As we discussed earlier, the provision of social care and housing has a huge impact on quality of life and discharge from hospital. As my noble friend will be aware, the noble Baroness, Lady Casey, will be commencing her look into social care, to report to us all on the immediate and long-term changes that are needed and to build cross-party consensus.

Primary Healthcare Facilities

Debate between Baroness Merron and Lord Turnberg
Monday 17th March 2025

(2 weeks, 3 days ago)

Lords Chamber
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Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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I certainly agree and can reassure the noble Lord that this is the case. I know that your Lordships’ House will have heard me speak previously about the very considerable investment that the Chancellor committed to in the Budget to provide adaptions for people’s houses in order that they could be cared for at home. I also say to the noble Lord that integrated care systems infrastructure strategies have been developed, which will create a long-term plan for future estate requirements and investment, while community health services also provide for planned and urgent care close to home, including clinics, care homes and, to the point raised by a previous noble Baroness, community hospitals.

Lord Turnberg Portrait Lord Turnberg (Lab)
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My Lords, the biggest problem is the shortage of GPs. We are losing them faster than we are recruiting them. What plans do the Government have to increase the number of general practitioners?

Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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I am glad to say that recently, as my noble friend will be aware, we concluded the annual consultation on the GP contract and the committee voted in favour of the contract for the first time in four years. That will provide a way forward in terms of strengthening provision, prevention and the integration of services, which I hope will lift morale and the attraction to being a GP. We want to see consistent growth. There are now over 1,000 more full-time equivalent doctors working in general practice compared with January 2024. We have committed to training thousands more GPs across the country and recruiting over 1,000 newly qualified GPs through an £82 million boost to the additional roles reimbursement scheme.

Adult Social Care: Long-term Workforce Plan

Debate between Baroness Merron and Lord Turnberg
Monday 13th January 2025

(2 months, 3 weeks ago)

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Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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I can give that assurance to the noble Lord, and I am glad he has identified to your Lordships’ House the wide range of circumstances in which the workforce might be. For the benefit of your Lordships’ House, I should add that, in their manifesto, the Government made a commitment to

“ensure the publication of regular, independent workforce planning, across health and social care”.

We are currently developing advice on the options about how to fulfil this commitment for adult social care, which will take account of the point the noble Lord made.

Lord Turnberg Portrait Lord Turnberg (Lab)
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My Lords, one of the major problems is that most care workers are employed by privately owned care homes, both large and small. Many of these employees are on zero-hour contracts—it is a mess. How does one ensure that we have a national workforce plan if we have all these workers in various organisations? We must bring them all together and have a centrally regulated qualification that is nationally recognised. I hope I am not boring my noble friend by asking the same question: when are we going to get a nationally recognised qualification and registration?

Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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My noble friend is never boring and certainly does not bore this Minister. I very much take the point about the difference between the social care workforce and the NHS workforce, because the majority of the jobs in social care, as my noble friend says, are in the independent sector and the Department of Health and Social Care does not have the levers to ensure a development pipeline. However, this is a challenge for us to meet, not something to turn away from: it is a matter of working across the whole of the workforce, no matter where they are from.

On professionalisation, I agree that we need to enhance skills, because care needs to be of the right quality. I mentioned earlier the development of the care workforce pathway, which is a new career structure, and also that the level 2 adult social care certificate qualification has been confirmed.

Health and Adult Social Care Reform

Debate between Baroness Merron and Lord Turnberg
Tuesday 7th January 2025

(2 months, 3 weeks ago)

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Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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I am grateful to the noble Lord for welcoming many of the measures in this announcement. He referred to the £20 fee that will be paid to GPs to call the consultant where necessary. I understand the concern about increasing bureaucracy, but all these reforms are intended to work the other way. We will very closely monitor them and have very carefully considered them with all those who will be dealing with them. I am actually more than hopeful, because the intention is that allowing the GP, for example, to get further advice, and making sure that people are being seen in the right place, will save money. It will mean that people are not taking up a referral place and that they will be referred for the necessary tests, scans, et cetera without the middle bit, which is a very backward-facing way of dealing with things. We will continue to monitor that to ensure that we are reducing what is currently wasted clinical time, while also preventing unnecessary out-patient appointments. The monitoring should show all of that and I will be very happy to update the House on that. The fee is to ensure that it can happen and is an incentive to do so. Of course, the greatest prize is an increased and speedier service for patients.

Lord Turnberg Portrait Lord Turnberg (Lab)
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My Lords, it is pleasing to welcome the proposals from the Government. It is also very pleasing to hear of the immediate things that can be done for social care, because we should not be waiting for the final report.

There are some more suggestions that we could make that do not require any money—that should be music to the Minister’s ear. We do not need more money to reduce the bureaucracy that people in the community are required to go through to gain admission to a care home. It is horrendous. They have a means test and a needs test serially, which can be very bureaucratic and time-consuming, and there are waiting lists. We must reduce that bureaucracy.

The second thing, which the Minister has already referred to, is the value that we place on care home workers. It is good to hear that they will get a rise in their money and that ideas will be put about on their careers, but, unless they have a recognised national qualification and registration of that qualification, career prospects will be limited. We must do more for them to allow them to see themselves in a career that could go on to nursing in the NHS. We must do more in that field if we are to retain these enormously valuable people.

Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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My noble friend, as always, makes very practical observations. I totally agree with the point about bureaucracy in terms of care homes. I have experienced that as I have power of attorney for an elderly friend, and I constantly wonder: if I am struggling with it, what would it be like for somebody who perhaps is not as used as I am to dealing with forms, organisations and, indeed, bureaucracy? It is extremely troubling. Yes, that will be part of what we will be looking at to improve social care—and also the discharge ability that we were talking about earlier. Valuing care workers, professionalising the service and recognising them are all key. I agree that it should be a natural move from being a care worker into a clinical setting, but we also need to recruit people to be care workers, retain them and upskill them, which is so important.

NHS Plan: Consultation

Debate between Baroness Merron and Lord Turnberg
Monday 2nd December 2024

(4 months ago)

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Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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This is indeed one of the groups for whom we need to ensure absolute inclusion. As I mentioned, the work with integrated care systems will be particularly helpful in running the workshop. We train organisations to work with it, and it is designed so that it is easy to use. It can be used in events to reach the seldom-heard voices in communities, including those with learning disabilities. It is vital that we hear from them as we design an NHS fit for everybody for the future.

Lord Turnberg Portrait Lord Turnberg (Lab)
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My Lords, one of the biggest causes of inequality is where you live in the country. If you live in the north-east or north-west, you live two, three or four years less than if you live in the south-west or south-east. Far fewer resources are available for people in those deprived areas: there are fewer doctors, nurses, physios, dentists and so on. What can the Government do to redress this gross imbalance?

Baroness Merron Portrait Baroness Merron (Lab)
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My noble friend allows me to say—and I hope your Lordships’ House will agree with this—that our approach will of course focus on addressing the social determinants of health. The goal will be to halve the gap in healthy life expectancy between the richest and the poorest regions. We are not just going to be moving from sickness to prevention as one of our three pillars, important though that is; we are also seeking, across government, to address the root causes of health inequalities. Again, that is being highlighted as part of the consultation.