Draft Medical Devices (Post-market Surveillance Requirements) (Amendment) (Great Britain) Regulations 2024 Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateCaroline Johnson
Main Page: Caroline Johnson (Conservative - Sleaford and North Hykeham)Department Debates - View all Caroline Johnson's debates with the Department of Health and Social Care
(1 day, 14 hours ago)
General CommitteesIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Efford. I think we all understand the context of the IMMDS review. Having spoken on Sunday afternoon to a lady who is suffering having had a mesh put in—the skin has never healed over the top and she is facing difficulties—I fully understand the reasons for the regulations. We all want safety; we all want the equipment that doctors like me use to be safe. We also all want support for the science and technology sector, and we all want people in the UK to have early access to the very best new medical devices. As such, the importance of the regulations is not just that they are there and they are strong, but that they are proportionate and effective in their aims. I have a few questions in regard to that.
First, the MHRA will be sent lots of data—reports on 3 million medical devices at one, two and three-year intervals, depending on the type of device. Is the MHRA required to look at that data, or to check whether manufacturers are required to produce these reports, or even to check that manufacturers have produced these reports? If it does have such a requirement, does the MHRA have the resources to look at all this extra data and to review it? If it does not have such a requirement, what is the point?
The cost estimate in the impact assessment talked about £310 million over 10 years, but for 3 million devices that does not seem particularly high. Six months is being given for these regulations to become legally enforced. Is that long enough for businesses to prepare and for the MHRA to get ready to look at this?
How much of this cost will be passed to the NHS, and how much has the NHS budgeted for such costs? How will the NHS comply with the legal requirement to get patient experience data? The Minister talked about the importance of getting patient experience data where appropriate, so what will the exemptions be? If someone was having a Guedel Airway put in, they would probably be unconscious and might not be aware of how effective the device was—if they woke up it would probably be more effective than if they did not, I suppose, but it is quite difficult.
Confidentiality is also an issue. If a medical device like a new hip is being put into somebody, will the Government provide information to manufacturers on who has got their hips, or is the manufacturer expected to guess? Or is the NHS expected to act as a go-between, and if so, how will that work in practice?
The regulations are also a bit of a burden on small businesses. I notice the Government have made the decision, as evidenced in the impact assessment, to include all small businesses—even micro-businesses—under these regulations. Has the Minister considered whether that will incentivise businesses to set up elsewhere, in Europe or overseas, reducing UK innovation and reducing the likelihood that manufacturers will apply for a UK Conformity Assessed mark because there is more regulation in the UK than elsewhere? Will that delay access to new devices for our patients in this country? In particular, the “similar devices outside of GB” requirement requires even the smallest businesses to find out similar devices’ safety, around the globe. That is possibly something that a large multinational corporation could do, but a micro-business in, perhaps, Oxford or elsewhere would find it difficult to find all that information. The cost proportional to the business will be extremely high, which will reduce the number of new people entering the market.
Overall, the Government have the right intention to provide for patient safety. However, the longer period that safety has to be viewed over and the additional regulation compared to the European Union mean that, once again, the Government have chosen to take an EU regulation and gold-plate it, to the detriment of Britain, and ultimately potentially that of patients.
I thank the hon. Lady for her valuable contribution. These regulations introduce clearer, more robust requirements for post-market surveillance of medical devices, to improve patient safety and to signal a crucial shift in the way in which we manage medical devices in Great Britain.
The hon. Lady raised some important points. First, on the MHRA and whether it is appropriately resourced to cope with the likely increase in incident reporting as a result of this regulatory change, let me reassure her that the measures introduced in this instrument should not have a significant impact on MHRA capacity. Its systems and processes to provide regulatory oversight for vigilance reporting are already in place. The measures within this statutory instrument are expected to increase the volume of safety data reported to the MHRA. However, the accompanying improvements to data quality will support automation and reduce burdens associated with data analysis. To ensure that the MHRA’s systems for vigilance reporting are fully equipped to handle the new reporting requirements for manufacturers, we will verify system-readiness through comprehensive testing and validation ahead of the date of application of these regulations.
As the regulator for the whole United Kingdom, the MHRA is committed to protecting patient safety while enabling a regulatory environment in which the life sciences sector is able to innovate and to launch new medical products in the interests of public health across the UK. Contrary to the hon. Lady’s assertion that the regulatory burden will be increased and will therefore squash innovation, the opposite is the intention of this Government. The intention is to ensure that there is a clear regulatory framework throughout the United Kingdom—without having the disparities that we have at the moment—and to ensure that better, smarter use of the data will be available. The closer scrutiny of the efficacy of these medical devices will encourage innovation in medtech and in life sciences.
The Minister is saying that more regulation will encourage innovation. I am not sure I agree with that premise, but does he accept that these new regulations will lead to a higher regulatory burden on people wanting to set up medtech companies in the UK than in the EU or elsewhere?
We could get into a theological debate about the benefits or otherwise of regulations, but this statutory instrument will provide certainty and clarity across all four nations of the United Kingdom. It will provide a known framework for medtech and life science companies operating, or wishing to operate, in the UK. I see this as a good piece of secondary legislation to bring about the certainty that we want to give companies wishing to operate, or which are operating, in the United Kingdom, and to set up a common framework across our four nations. I see that as good. Regulatory divergence with another part of the United Kingdom is not, in my mind, good for business—particularly where a company wants to operate on both sides of the Irish sea.
On patient confidentiality and the cost estimates for the NHS, I hope the hon. Lady will forgive my having to write to the Committee on that point because the tablets of stone have not yet reached me from Mount Sinai.
On the hon. Lady’s question on innovation being reversed and whether people have long enough to prepare, we believe that the measures in the statutory instrument do give people long enough to prepare—not least because many of those companies are already operating in the parts of the United Kingdom that the instrument will bring our regulation in line with. Therefore the extra capacity that is needed in the system will not be to the detriment of the measures in this statutory instrument.
Parts of the UK are working to EU regulations, but does the Minister recognise that the statutory instrument he is bringing forward will introduce into the whole of the UK market, regulations that are not currently present in either the UK or EU markets?
I recognise that we are not only bringing Great Britain in line with Northern Ireland but adding other patient safety measures. If the hon. Lady is saying—I hope she is not—that the result of the Cumberlege review is that we do nothing in this area to improve the issues highlighted by it, she is within her powers to oppose these measures. However, we think not only that ensuring regulatory consistency throughout the United Kingdom is the right thing to do, but that this statutory instrument gives us the opportunity to start to put right some of the shocking, appalling things that we know have happened, as highlighted by the Cumberlege review. That is what these measures seek to do.
This Government are committed to the delivery of a framework for medical device regulation that prioritises patient safety—that is the crucial thing that we are seeking to do—and that gives patients access to the medical devices they need, and ensures that the United Kingdom remains an attractive market for medical technology innovators. We have an obligation to patients and the public to maintain the highest standards of safety and efficacy for the medical devices they rely on. These regulations are an important first step to deliver this framework, and they place patient safety at the forefront. They will enable not only the MHRA but the whole health system to better protect patients.
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for her contribution, and to Members across the Committee for considering these regulations today. I hope they will join me in supporting these regulations, so that we have consistency across the UK and put patient safety at the heart of medtech and life sciences.
Question put and agreed to.