(9 months, 1 week ago)
Lords ChamberAgain, everything that can add to our knowledge has to be a good thing.
My Lords, with an ageing population it is inevitable that this illness is going to increase in prevalence across the population. Do the Government have any intention of building into their strategy for caring for dementia the support, perhaps in the workplace, that might be needed, particularly for older women, who tend to be predominantly carers, maybe via insurance in the workplace for respite and for carer’s leave, in order to ensure that this is not such a strain on both the families and the public purse?
There is recognition in all these things that the workplace has a role here. I have looked at treatments and outcomes in the G7 countries, and Japan is often a good example of having care in the workplace, as my noble friend is aware. As so often, it is about making people realise that this is everyone’s problem to deal with. I will do more work to understand what we are doing to arm employers for that, and I will come back to my noble friend.
(9 months, 4 weeks ago)
Lords ChamberI believe that the latest number is 57%, but the general point stands that that leaves 43% which are making other types of provision. The work we are doing right now is trying to understand the success of those versus what we see as prudent with that 57%. That is the case we are making and the case that Minister Caulfield was referring to as well. I believe personally that it is a strong case, so it is something that, as I say, we are looking to work further on.
My Lords, I apologise for adding to the pressure on my noble friend, but half of all over-50s women will suffer fractures due to osteoporosis, and this affects 50,000 working-age women each year, yet too often this disease is just stereotyped as affecting old women. The menopause increases fracture risks for women in their 50s, when many are in the prime of their life. Might such mistaken stereotyping about old women explain the near total absence of osteoporosis from the Government’s laudable women’s health strategy? Will we perhaps see women’s health hubs referring women to fracture liaison services, with further progress in the forthcoming Budget?
Again, the use of hubs and their importance for getting people back to work is recognised. That is why in 2023, in the major conditions strategy, we announced the £400 million workforce programme to get 100,000 people with employee support back into work. It is absolutely recognised that what we can do with fracture liaison clinics is a major help. We are also looking at digital therapeutics—the app is close to my heart—that can help with MSK as well. There are a range of measures.
(10 months ago)
Lords ChamberClearly, we would all agree that the families need to be the priority in these terrible cases. What we have tried to do—and I have also done my own research into this—is make available what I call independent funding requests for when there is a new course of treatment which might not be allowed generally by NICE to give opportunities in those instances as well. I will come back to the noble Lord on things such as travel support and other expenses.
My Lords, I declare my interest in and my work with the Teenage Cancer Trust. In connection with the task force, will my noble friend let the House know what input charities that specialise in this kind of work with children and teenagers who, sadly, are in this position and their families will have into the task force? Will he join with me in commending the tremendous work done by this charity and the other charities which specialise in helping children and families going through this traumatic time?
Yes, I am very happy to add my thanks for everything they do in this. It is clear in these circumstances that the more support we can give families, the better. I will speak to Minister Caulfield to make sure that input is properly there because my noble friend is correct that it should be there.
(1 year, 10 months ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, I congratulate the noble Lord, Lord Davies, on highlighting a really serious issue in terms of the workforce situation within the National Health Service. I commend him on his clarity and ability to explain an incredibly complicated situation. I also congratulate my noble friend and welcome him to his position. I know that he is in listening mode and that the Government really want to sort out the problem; it has been hanging over the National Health Service for a number of years.
Small changes have been made to try to address different parts of the problem, but we are left with a situation where, partly because of the legacy of unexpected tax bills that hit senior staff and lowered morale at points over the past three or four years, we currently face a new problem that did not exist before and which has added to the difficulties faced by NHS staff: inflation. The NHS Pension Scheme, as with other public sector pension schemes, is an excellent scheme; the benefits provided for the majority of members are generous and of extremely high value relative to the salaries of most of the workforce. More than 1 million members are in that scheme, and the Government, in their new regulations, have commendably sought to widen the membership of the NHS Pension Scheme. Again, I commend the recent consultation measures that have been put forward; for example, bringing in more primary care network staff so that they do not have to keep opting in but can be automatically included.
I also welcome the attempts to attract back some of the people who have retired early from the NHS or left it for a number of reasons over the past few years. Were they to come back under the old rules, they would face extra penalties; however, those penalties are being removed. I again offer my noble friend and the Government my full support on trying to get people to come back flexibly, take partial pensions and make new contributions and to remove the limits on the number of hours worked—all of which is to be welcomed in allowing retired staff to rejoin the pension scheme.
There is also an attempt to address the inflation calculation problem, whereby the base for calculating the end-of-year inflation is being moved to 6 April so that it will take a base at a similar level of inflation to the previous year. However, that is a one-year fix, so it is not going to solve the long-term issue.
Given the cost to taxpayers of unfunded public sector pensions and, in my view, the right of public servants to expect good pensions, we need to recognise that there is a real problem for some groups of members for whom something which is supposed to be a brilliant workplace benefit has turned into a workplace penalty because of illogical tax rules. More senior and long-serving earners—and now even middle earners, not just the highest earners—are finding that their supposedly tax-free pension contributions are causing them to receive huge tax demands that can even exceed the extra earnings that they may make from taking on an extra shift or doing some overtime, so they are effectively paying to work for the NHS. That is not intentional; the rules in theory are having unintended consequences in practice. The tax system rules that the Treasury has devised are intended to limit the extra tax-exempt pensions so that taxpayers do not have uncapped, extra-large bills going forward, but, in practice, there is complexity, a lack of transparency and perhaps inappropriateness in applying rules that might work for defined contribution pension schemes to defined benefit pension schemes—as well as in trying to limit not only the amount of money going into the scheme each year but the amount built up over the long run. Surely, if you limit the amount that goes in on an annual basis, you should not need to punish people if they have a big pension at the end—is that not the point of building up pensions? I urge my noble friend perhaps to meet a group of interested Peers and representatives from the Treasury to try to work through how we can fix some of the illogical tax rules.
I have identified four elements of the pension scheme that are not working: the annual allowance itself; the tapered annual allowance, on which the Government have gone quite a long way to try to ensure that the increased level at which that bites in the NHS has taken some of the sting out of what was a problem lower down the scale before; the lifetime allowance; and the 20-times pension calculation, regardless of whether you take early retirement. The latter means that it will be advisable for many people to retire in their 50s—as soon as they can—if they are just coming up to the lifetime allowance, because the 20-times calculation will be applied to the pension at that stage, rather than to stay on, work longer, wait until they have a bigger pension and slip over the limit.
There is the inflation calculation, as the noble Lord, Lord Davies, has mentioned, the index mismatch and the failure to have any offset for negative growth. Again, if we were to be able to change Sections 234 and 235 of the Finance Act 2004 to better allow the total pension calculation that accrues above inflation, that would at least address some of this issue.
A final element that I would like to highlight is that there is the possibility for members who face tax charges to have those charges paid by the pension scheme. It is called “scheme pays”, and effectively it means that you get a lower pension later on because the pension scheme has paid your tax bill today. But what we need to do is to take away the punitive interest rate charged for the calculation made for the “scheme pays” amount. Right now a member is charged CPI plus 2.4%, effectively 12.5% to borrow money from their pension scheme, meaning that they get a lower pension later on.
(1 year, 12 months ago)
Lords ChamberI agree. Arguably, if you are being home schooled, you probably need a lot of help. As the noble Lord will be aware, a lot of the services are related to social prescribing, where often people with mental disorders can be helped by involving them more in community activities. Clearly, those who are home schooled are much more likely to be isolated.
My Lords, I congratulate my noble friend on his previous answer about triaging so that those in care can get urgent mental health support. Does he have any targets in mind as to the proportion of children in care with mental health needs who could be seen within, let us say, six months rather than the current waiting time of up to two years?
I thank my noble friend. The NHS has recently set out a national framework for the practical pathways that it expects ICBs to follow in terms of getting diagnoses. To be very open with my noble friend, given demand, setting targets in this space is probably not the wisest thing to do, but we understand that we need to get on top of this.
(2 years ago)
Lords ChamberBelieve me, I am no fan of complexity. At the same time, I want to make sure, as I am sure we all do, that the funding goes to the places of most need and is really being spent on the areas that it is being spent on. Having said that, I will take away those comments at face value and will look into the complexity because, clearly, that is in no one’s interest.
My Lords, the crisis in social care has been worsening since I was advising the Dilnot commission in 2011. What plans do the Government have to improve the situation rather than watch it deteriorate? Age UK estimates that there are about 2 million elderly people needing care who are not receiving it, so 200,000 care packages are hardly going to make enough difference.
I thank my noble friend. As the population grows older, we must look at how to cater for these areas. We have been having real-term increases year after year of 2.5%, and 22% by 2024-25 is a substantial increase by any measure. At the same time, satisfaction levels are high. Do we need to do more? Clearly, we need to keep up in this space.
(2 years ago)
Lords ChamberThe noble Viscount mentioned funding. Clearly, it was a difficult choice, but our priority was to make sure that the funding went into the supply of places over the next two years, because of the impact that has across the system. Noble Lords will have heard me mention many times how that affects the whole flow, which backs up into ambulance wait times and everything else. That is why I am delighted to say that we have secured £2.8 billion of extra funding in 2023-24 and £4.7 billion in 2024-25. That will obviously flow through the whole system, including into staff wages and recruitment.
My Lords, I welcome the announcement of the health and social care visa, but the Government have no separate figures for the number of workers who have come here under the new health and care special visa rules, separately for health staff and social care staff. So can my noble friend tell the House what are the median and top quartile pay rates for social care staff? I am happy for him to write to me if he does not have those figures. Do the new visa’s minimum salary requirements mean there is little hope of immigration filling the 165,000 or more vacancies, leaving 2.6 million older people without the care they need, as estimated by Age UK?
I will need to write on the detail of the median and upper quartiles, as mentioned. What I can say right now, though, is that the national living wage increase will put them over the current visa levels required, which I think will be a big boost, allowing us to increase our recruitment from overseas. We have already seen month-on-month increases and the national living wage increase will help grow that further.
(2 years ago)
Lords ChamberI agree that we have to make sure that GPs are equipped with the full range of tools for the job and the full range of knowledge. We are probably all aware of some instances of GPs who are very aware and progressive in this space, and others where they do not have that same level of information. We are putting a £2.3 billion increase in 2023-24 into the mental health space to treat an extra 2 million people. We need to make sure that we have a range of help that we can put in place for these people.
My Lords, I echo the words of my noble friend that GPs are absolutely critical to sorting out these issues, and the Dame Carol Black review on overprescribing presumably will look into that too. Does he agree that one of the problems that urgently needs to be sorted is the pension issues that are driving our GPs to retire early? Might we look forward to some early resolution of that problem?
I am very aware of the issue. Funnily enough, just today I had a meeting on this with the noble Baroness, Lady Finlay. It is something on which we are working closely with Treasury and other officials.
(2 years, 2 months ago)
Lords ChamberThat is a really important angle that I had not considered, to be honest. We recognise that, across government, many Ministers in many departments will be waiting at the moment with bated breath for the Prime Minister’s announcement to work out the impact on those stakeholders who have been contacting Ministers and others about the impact of energy costs. Clearly, something has to be done. The Prime Minister will announce it and then we will have to work through its impact. If I am still in post, I can come back to say how that will impact the health and care sector.
My Lords, will my noble friend look into the situation of care homes, whether they are in the private sector or not, that have not currently participated in the government handouts to help with energy costs? Second home owners have had discounts on their bills, but there has been no per-bed contribution from the Government to help care homes which are already struggling and for which many families are paying enormous sums.
My noble friend makes a point that I was not aware of, so I am afraid I will have to take it back to the department. However, it appears a very reasonable point.
(2 years, 2 months ago)
Lords ChamberThe noble Baroness makes the point about general practice. One thing that we are looking at, which will probably come up in the debate later in the week on the future of primary care, is the whole issue of what GPs do. There are many things they do that they do not have to do—these could be done by local partners, practice nurses, physiotherapists or social prescribing, and so on. In addition, Ministers and the NHS have been in conversation with GPs’ representatives, looking at these particular issues.
My Lords, could my noble friend update the House on the scheme for bringing in overseas workers to fill the gaps in social care that have opened up so seriously over the last year or two? There have been suggestions that the salary level—which currently does not allow sufficient numbers of care workers to come into the UK, when they are desperately needed—might be lowered. Is there any update for the House on that?
I thank my noble friend for the question. The last I was aware of—and I shall look at it and write to my noble friend—was that, under the visa scheme, we were looking to bring in people from overseas to fill those vacancies. We have historically done that; as I said, after the war we looked to people from the Commonwealth, who came and saved our public services. Clearly, when we are unable to recruit enough people locally, we have to look at those issues and at whether it is something to do with the education system, and whether we can encourage them to come forward. But where there are gaps we will have to look more widely to our partners around the world.