Debates between Greg Smith and Karin Smyth during the 2024 Parliament

Women’s Health Strategy

Debate between Greg Smith and Karin Smyth
Thursday 30th January 2025

(3 days, 21 hours ago)

Commons Chamber
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Urgent Questions are proposed each morning by backbench MPs, and up to two may be selected each day by the Speaker. Chosen Urgent Questions are announced 30 minutes before Parliament sits each day.

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Karin Smyth Portrait Karin Smyth
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My hon. Friend makes a very powerful case and talks of an experience that he and his wife went through forty years ago, which highlights that it can sometimes take an unacceptably long time to get what is known as good practice through the system and to have that consistency for women and their families across the overall system. We absolutely need to ensure that maternity services understand best practice and that it is rolled out properly across the country.

Greg Smith Portrait Greg Smith (Mid Buckinghamshire) (Con)
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In an earlier answer, the Minister rightly talked about the arrangement the Government have over spare capacity in the independent sector. My female constituents and women up and down the land want to know what that actually means in practice: what does that mean for the 260,000 women waiting more than 18 weeks for gynaecology treatment? How many treatments will the independent sector be delivering, and to what timescale? We need to get those women the treatment that they need.

Karin Smyth Portrait Karin Smyth
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The hon. Gentleman can tell his women constituents what I hope everyone across the House will be able to tell their constituents: this Government inherited 600,000 women on those waiting lists, and we are committed—as said in our elective reform plan, which highlighted gynaecology in particular—to getting those waiting lists down from 18 months to 18 weeks in the lifetime of this Parliament.

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Greg Smith and Karin Smyth
Tuesday 7th January 2025

(3 weeks, 5 days ago)

Commons Chamber
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Karin Smyth Portrait The Minister for Secondary Care (Karin Smyth)
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My hon. Friend is right to highlight the particular problems in his constituency. Decisions on the configuration of call centres are a matter for local trusts in consultation with staff and representatives, and I encourage him to continue to engage with the trust in the interests of his constituents.

Greg Smith Portrait Greg Smith (Mid Buckinghamshire) (Con)
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Will the additional money announced for hospices before Christmas cover the full cost of the increase in employer’s national insurance contributions or not?

Winter Preparedness

Debate between Greg Smith and Karin Smyth
Wednesday 18th December 2024

(1 month, 2 weeks ago)

Commons Chamber
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Karin Smyth Portrait Karin Smyth
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I do not wish to test your patience, Madam Deputy Speaker, but good falls practice has not been prioritised over the past decade, and the failure to prioritise it and continue the work that I know was being done many years ago is yet another testament to the failure of the Conservative party. My hon. Friend is right to refer to the way we can use AI to help the system to improve, so that this hugely preventable problem, which is so damaging to the elderly in particular, no longer occurs.

Greg Smith Portrait Greg Smith (Mid Buckinghamshire) (Con)
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Winter pressures come around every year for all sorts of reasons. The difference this year was the political choice to take the winter fuel payment away from millions of pensioners. Worse still, the 44,000 pensioners living with a terminal illness will lose that payment. I cannot believe that a Minister as diligent as the hon. Lady has not carried out an impact assessment of the cost to the NHS of people being left in cold homes. My right hon. Friend the Member for Melton and Syston (Edward Argar)—the shadow Secretary of State—and my right hon. Friend the Member for Aldridge-Brownhills (Wendy Morton) asked for such an assessment. May I give the Minister another chance to commit to publishing it?

Karin Smyth Portrait Karin Smyth
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The hon. Gentleman is wholly wrong to say that winter crises happen under every Government in every year. They happened, and became a fact of the NHS, under his party’s Government. The key difference this year, which the Conservatives will still not address, is the fact that doctors are not on strike. Doctors are working in the system, caring for patients and doing their job, because this Government, on day one and week one and week four, delivered the negotiated settlement with the doctors. We cannot run the NHS and we cannot manage a winter crisis without doctors in the frontline, and that is where they are. That is what the difference is.

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Greg Smith and Karin Smyth
Tuesday 15th October 2024

(3 months, 2 weeks ago)

Commons Chamber
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Karin Smyth Portrait Karin Smyth
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What we see at the front end of the system is a result of the deterioration throughout the system, and the flow of patients from the community, through discharge and, indeed, through social care. Our ambitious 10-year plan will involve examining the entire patient pathway to ensure that care is provided in the community, closer to home. Prevention is a key part of that, as is the look that we are taking at social care.

Greg Smith Portrait Greg Smith (Mid Buckinghamshire) (Con)
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3. What steps he plans to take to reform adult social care.