World COPD Day

Helen Morgan Excerpts
Thursday 20th November 2025

(1 day, 6 hours ago)

Westminster Hall
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Helen Morgan Portrait Helen Morgan (North Shropshire) (LD)
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Efford. I start by congratulating the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon), who is a friend of all of us in this House, on securing this debate and raising awareness of World Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Day, which took place yesterday. I thank him for his tireless campaigning for this cause, and for his excellent opening speech, which outlined the issues faced by COPD sufferers.

As we have heard, COPD is the name given to a group of health conditions that affect the lungs and cause breathing difficulties, such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis. Patients with COPD may face symptoms such as shortness of breath, a chesty cough, frequent chest infections and wheezing, which get progressively worse over time and may be exacerbated during the winter months. As someone who has had asthma from childhood, I know at first hand the fear, frustration and disruption to daily life that gasping for breath can cause. It is critical that there is a plan in place to manage respiratory disease, given that we may be facing a devasting winter crisis in the NHS once more.

The most recent data published by the NHS shows that there were over 1.17 million patients recorded by GPs as having COPD in England in 2023-24. The National Institute for Care Excellence warns that the real number of sufferers may be much higher, noting that previous Government research put the number at around 3 million in the UK, 2 million of whom remain undiagnosed. Approximately one in 10 adults over the age of 40 has COPD in the UK, at a cost of £2 billion a year to the NHS.

As the main cause of COPD is smoking, it is a highly preventable condition. I welcome the Government’s introduction of legislation to enable a smoke-free generation, but we must also consider those who have already started smoking and who are finding it hard to quit, or those who can circumvent the provisions of the Tobacco and Vapes Bill.

Smoking is much more common in deprived areas, as we have already heard, so COPD is also a stark indicator of social and health inequalities in this country. The Liberal Democrats want the new Government to take urgent action to support people to live healthier lives, starting by reversing in full the Conservative cuts to funding for public health, of which smoking cessation services are a critical part. I am sure all Members agree that prevention is better than cure, and helping smokers to kick the habit will not only reduce their risk of debilitating illness but will save taxpayers money in the long run. The cost of COPD is £2 billion per annum, and everyone benefits if fewer people require treatment for smoking-related illness.

Along with smoking, long-term exposure to air pollution may be a cause of COPD. The Liberal Democrats have pledged to reduce air pollution; to protect people, especially children, from breathing in harmful pollutants by passing a clean air Act based on World Health Organisation guidelines and enforced by a new air quality agency; and to improve public transport and active travel to reduce the harm caused by air pollution at home, school and work. I would welcome the Minister’s thoughts on those proposals, which would drastically reduce avoidable respiratory diseases.

The theme for World COPD Day this year is “Short of Breath, Think COPD”, and it aims to raise awareness of underdiagnosis and misdiagnosis of COPD. As I mentioned, there could be 2 million people undiagnosed in the UK who are missing out on essential treatment and advice on how best to manage their debilitating condition. NICE recommends that COPD should be suspected in anyone aged over 35 with a risk factor for COPD and symptoms of breathlessness, chronic cough, regular phlegm production, frequent chest infections in the winter, or wheezing.

The Liberal Democrats have called for anyone with a long-term health condition, including COPD, to have a named GP, which would improve the continuity and therefore the quality of their care. People with COPD consistently report difficulties accessing services that are essential to managing their condition, including GP appointments, specialist care and pulmonary rehabilitation. They also experience poor communication between different healthcare providers and inadequate follow-up after hospital discharge.

As we have heard, COPD patients are often left in the dark with inadequate information about their condition when they are first diagnosed. Better continuity of care in the community would surely help to overcome at least some of those issues. To achieve that, we need the Government to be much more ambitious in their plans to increase GP numbers. We need them to adopt Lib Dem plans to retain and recruit 8,000 more GPs over this Parliament to deliver that improvement in care.

We are also campaigning to improve the speed of new treatments by expanding the capacity of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. We are also pressing for better social care, including for people with COPD who are struggling to manage independently. We would provide more support for family carers through initiatives such as the right to respite breaks, paid carer’s leave and an end to the cliff edge in the way that carer’s allowance is paid, so that no one is forced to pay back thousands of pounds because they worked an extra hour a week.

We would also help people who struggle to get into work because of their illness, with a new right to flexible working and the right to work from home unless there is a really good business reason why that is not possible. We would make it easier for people with long-term conditions, such as COPD and those with disabilities, to access public life, including the world of work, through a range of measures that allow better physical access and proper adjustment to the workplace.

Many people with COPD are at risk of a stay in hospital, and they are often unable to get home after that because of the crisis in social care, which is putting even more strain on the NHS. The Government established the Casey commission to find a cross-party solution to the social care problem, and I welcome that, but I have to report that despite a promising opening roundtable in September, there have been no further talks. Will the Minister update us on the progress of that work?

The winter presents an immediate problem. There are warnings of a particularly bad flu season, which is causing concern for everyone who is more vulnerable to respiratory illness, including those with COPD. My local hospital, Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic hospital, and the Shrewsbury and Telford hospital NHS trust have already introduced some mandatory mask wearing to reduce the risk of transmission of respiratory disease in the hospital. That means that an effective vaccination programme is especially important this year.

I was concerned by news that covid vaccination eligibility has been significantly reduced. This autumn and winter, vaccination is being offered only to people over 75 and those with a weakened immune system. People with chronic respiratory disease, including COPD and asthma, have been excluded despite the clear risk—I speak from too many personal 2 am nebuliser experiences—that even a mild respiratory infection poses for them. Also excluded are the main carer for an older or disabled person, those who are in receipt of carer’s allowance or who are living with someone who has a weakened immune system, and, perhaps most surprisingly, frontline health and social care workers.

All those people remain eligible for a flu vaccine, and that is good. Even though covid is now considered to be a mild disease, time off for NHS and care workers when services are at their most pressured, as well as the significant risk of transmission to vulnerable patients, is concerning. Will the Government consider a review of the decision to restrict access to covid vaccines this year? Can the Minister provide statistics on the uptake so far of flu vaccines within different groups and outline what steps she is taking to ensure high levels of uptake among NHS and care workers?

In conclusion, COPD is a debilitating condition and, as with many conditions in the UK, there is something of a postcode lottery in the quality of care patients receive. I welcome the Government’s roll-out of the NHS RightCare COPD pathway and the National Respiratory Audit programme, along with plans to improve access to pulmonary rehabilitation. I would be grateful if the Minister updated us in her closing remarks on progress with those programmes, as well as answering my questions about vaccine roll-out, support for carers and the Casey commission, access to a named GP, and full restoration of the public health grant, including for smoking cessation services.