All 3 Debates between Stephen Kinnock and Rebecca Smith

GP Contract

Debate between Stephen Kinnock and Rebecca Smith
Monday 16th March 2026

(1 week, 2 days ago)

Commons Chamber
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Stephen Kinnock Portrait Stephen Kinnock
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My hon. Friend makes such an important point about paying tribute to the incredible work that our GPs and their teams do right across the length and breadth of our country, including in Gedling; he is an excellent champion for his constituency. This is about marrying investment with reform. In addition to the £1.1 billion in the previous contract, the £485 million this year and the measures I mentioned to recruit more GPs to the frontline, there is also very important work happening around the shift from treatment to prevention in the 10-year plan. We are boosting childhood vaccination rates, providing better care for patients living with obesity and requiring GPs to share data with the lung cancer screening programme. This is about incentivising GPs, working with them as partners as we move forward into the modernisation of our health service.

Rebecca Smith Portrait Rebecca Smith (South West Devon) (Con)
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The new contract has stated that GPs must offer on-the-day appointments for urgent requests—which they already do—and unlimited access during opening hours up to 6.30 pm, with no definition of “urgent”. Katrina, a constituent who messaged me today, said, “This will mean that those with complex needs, like me, will wait longer for appointments.” What reassurance can the Secretary of State offer constituents such as Katrina that this new system will work for everyone, not just those self-diagnosing their sick note as urgent?

Stephen Kinnock Portrait Stephen Kinnock
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The key point here is that GPs are the clinicians whom we trust to define what urgent means. There are, of course, a number of criteria and conditions that will ring an extra alarm bell and ensure that the patient is registered as urgent. It is worth mentioning that 46% of all GP appointments already take place on the same day as contact is made with the surgery—with the majority of those classified as urgent—so performance is already good. This is not something new that we are landing on general practice; it is much more about ensuring that we have a clear line of sight into who the urgent patients are and ensuring that they get treatment on the first day.

Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

Debate between Stephen Kinnock and Rebecca Smith
Friday 16th May 2025

(10 months, 1 week ago)

Commons Chamber
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Stephen Kinnock Portrait Stephen Kinnock
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As a Minister at the Dispatch Box, with the Government being neutral, I am not commenting on the policy intent of the Bill. What I am saying is that the new clause could create significant uncertainty. For example, it is not clear how the standard it introduces would interact with the definition of “terminal illness” set out in clause 2, which requires that a person’s death

“can reasonably be expected within six months”,

as it is not clear whether “reasonably be expected” fits within the balance of probabilities threshold or is beyond reasonable doubt.

Amendment 101 would exclude any person with a learning disability, including people with Down syndrome, from a preliminary discussion about assisted dying unless they raise the subject themselves, irrespective of whether they would otherwise be eligible. That may be subject to challenge under various international agreements, including the United Nations convention on the rights of persons with disabilities and article 14 of the European convention on human rights, which prohibits disability discrimination.

Amendment 102 would introduce a requirement that

“the registered medical practitioner must ensure that the person has no remediable suicide risk factors which pose a significant risk to their life”

before holding a preliminary discussion under clause 5. The terms “remediable suicide risk factors” and

“a significant risk to their life”

have not been defined, so the amendment may be difficult to operationalise.

Rebecca Smith Portrait Rebecca Smith (South West Devon) (Con)
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I tabled amendment 102 in good faith, as I thought it might be workable.

I want to reflect on what the Minister said at the beginning of his speech. I do not recall ever being offered an opportunity to pass my amendments to Government officials to ensure that they would be workable. Given the scope of what we are debating this afternoon, it sounds very much like any amendments that have not been tabled by the hon. Member for Spen Valley (Kim Leadbeater) had no chance of being taken forward unless she accepted them.

None Portrait Hon. Members
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Hear, hear.

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Stephen Kinnock and Rebecca Smith
Tuesday 6th May 2025

(10 months, 2 weeks ago)

Commons Chamber
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Stephen Kinnock Portrait Stephen Kinnock
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I absolutely share the frustrations of my hon. Friend and his constituents. The investment made today was in response to GPs telling us that they needed more space; the investment will lead to more capacity and better access and outcomes for his constituents. Today’s announcement was only possible thanks to the decisions made in the October Budget, which were opposed by every party opposite. The choice is clear: investment in our NHS with Labour, or cuts with the Tories and Reform.

Rebecca Smith Portrait Rebecca Smith (South West Devon) (Con)
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My constituent Dr Toby Nelson, an NHS consultant dermatologist, has started a business that seeks to address the heavy demand on primary care for skin health screening. His business Map My Mole sends an image capture kit to patients to attach to their smartphones. The patients then send a high-resolution image remotely to be reviewed by a specialist consultant, bypassing the need for a GP appointment and freeing up time and resources for both doctor and patient. It has already resulted in a significant drop in skin cancer referrals in pilot GP surgeries. Will the Minister agree to meet Dr Nelson and me to discuss this revolutionary proposal?

Stephen Kinnock Portrait Stephen Kinnock
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The hon. Lady raises what sounds like an extremely interesting scheme. She will know that we have a strong commitment in our 10-year plan to shift from hospital to community, and indeed from analogue to digital. The digital aspects of that scheme sound very interesting, so I would be more than happy to take further representations from her.