Category: Health

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on the Appointment of Natalie Forrest

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on the Appointment of Natalie Forrest

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 January 2021.

    I’m delighted to appoint Natalie into this role. She not only brings unrivalled experience in health management and nursing, but also the construction and project management knowledge that helped turn the Excel conference centre into a Nightingale Hospital in just 9 days, as well as overseeing the rebuild of Chase Farm Hospital at pace.

    The New Hospital Programme – as part of our Health Infrastructure Plan – will transform the delivery of NHS healthcare infrastructure to build back better and will ensure our country has world-class healthcare facilities right across the country for decades to come.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on the Oxford Vaccine

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on the Oxford Vaccine

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 4 January 2021.

    I am delighted that today we are rolling out the Oxford vaccine – a testament to British science. This is a pivotal moment in our fight against this awful virus and I hope it provides renewed hope to everybody that the end of this pandemic is in sight.

    Through its vaccine delivery plan the NHS is doing everything it can to vaccinate those most at risk as quickly as possible and we will rapidly accelerate our vaccination programme.

    While the most vulnerable are immunised, I urge everybody to continue following the restrictions so we can keep cases down and protect our loved ones.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Mass Vaccinations

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Mass Vaccinations

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 3 January 2021.

    Urgent we scale up mass vaccination given the variant spread with such speed. The initial target should be two million a week and then expand. We need:

    Resources for all GPs to administer.
    Use Community Pharmacy.
    Mobile vaccine units for hard to reach communities.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments about Health Situation in London

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments about Health Situation in London

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 1 January 2021.

    Over the past week we have seen infections and hospitalisations rise sharply across London and hospitals are coming under increased pressure.

    While our priority is to keep as many children as possible in school, we have to strike a balance between education and infection rates and pressures on the NHS.

    The situation in London continues to worsen and so today we are taking action to protect the public and reduce the spread of this disease in the community.

    Everyone across London must take this situation incredibly seriously and act responsibly to minimise the spread of this deadly disease.

  • Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on the Oxford University/AstraZeneca Vaccine

    Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on the Oxford University/AstraZeneca Vaccine

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 30 December 2020.

    The approval of the Oxford vaccine is a massive step forward in our fight against coronavirus. It is a tribute to the incredible UK scientists at Oxford University and AstraZeneca, whose breakthrough will help to save lives around the world. The light at the end of the tunnel just got brighter.

    Vaccines are the exit route from the pandemic. We have already vaccinated hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people and the new Oxford jab will allow us to accelerate our vaccination plan, allowing us to return to normality in the future.

    This is a moment to celebrate British innovation – not only are we responsible for discovering the first treatment to reduce mortality for COVID-19, this vaccine will be made available to some of the poorest regions of the world at a low cost, helping protect countless people from this awful disease.

    I want to thank every single person who has been part of this British success story. While it is a time to be hopeful, it is so vital everyone continues to play their part to drive down infections.

  • Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on Increased Funding for Testing in Care Homes

    Matt Hancock – 2020 Comments on Increased Funding for Testing in Care Homes

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 December 2020.

    We have worked throughout the pandemic to protect staff, and residents in care homes and today we are boosting rapid testing in care homes, with a further £149 million pounds to support that effort. All those who work in care homes across England will receive 2 rapid tests a week, in addition to their weekly PCR test.

  • Matt Hancock – 2020 Statement on Covid-19

    Matt Hancock – 2020 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 December 2020.

    Good afternoon and welcome to Downing Street for today’s coronavirus briefing.

    I’m joined by Dr Jenny Harries, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, and Dr Susan Hopkins, the Chief Medical Advisor to Public Health England and NHS Test and Trace.

    We all know that 2020 has been a hard year.

    And it is ending in this festive period, which is going to be very different.

    After all the efforts that we’ve gone through to control this virus, and in many parts of the country, this virus is under control.

    Just as we’ve got a tiering system in place that was able to control this virus, we’ve discovered a new, more contagious virus, a variant which is spreading at a dangerous rate.

    And I know that the vast majority of people watching today and across the country understand what we need to do together to get through this.

    So today we’re announcing further action within the tiering system and also some further progress on vaccines and on testing.

    And I just wanted to say this before I set out the details of what we’re going to have to put in place: I know this action has consequences.

    And I know how difficult it is.

    But I also know that it is right to take the action that is necessary to control this virus.

    Across the country, cases have risen 57% in the last week

    The average daily COVID hospital admissions are 1,909 a day – that’s the highest figure since mid-April.

    There are 18,943 people in hospital right now, that’s almost as many as at the peak.

    And yesterday, 691 deaths from coronavirus were reported. That’s 691 people who have died just before Christmas. And our hearts go out to their families and loved ones as with all those that have died from this horrible disease.

    I know the pain this causes.

    So against this backdrop of rising infections, rising hospitalisations and rising number of people dying from coronavirus, it is absolutely vital that we act.

    We simply cannot have the kind of Christmas that we all yearn for.

    Of course, it’s the social contact that makes Christmas so special. But it is that social contact that the virus thrives on, and that’s how the virus has spread from one person to another.

    So it’s important that we all minimise our social contact as much as is possible this Christmas, and that will help protect ourselves, our loved ones and the whole country.

    We’ve got to keep our resolve. We’ve got to keep going through this.

    And there are 4 areas of our response that I want to update you on today very specifically.

    Local action

    The first are those tiering decisions that I’ve just mentioned.

    We know that the 3-tiered system worked to control the old variant, and is working now in large parts of the country, especially in Northern England.

    But, we also know that Tier 3 is not enough to control the new variant.

    That is not a hypothesis, it is a fact, and we’ve seen it on the ground.

    We have seen case rates rise in some of places close to where the current Tier 4 restrictions are, in places like East Anglia, where we’ve also detected a significant number of the new variant as we’ve seen case rates rise sharply.

    It is therefore necessary to put more of the East and South East of England into Tier 4.

    We are also taking action in parts of the South West, where there are some early signs of the new variant, and where cases are rising.

    Even though case rates in some of these areas are not as high as in some areas badly affected, in London for instance and in Kent, the direction is clear, and in many cases is quite stark.

    The doubling times are short.

    And we have learnt that when it’s a matter of when, not if we take action.

    It is better to act sooner.

    So, from one minute past midnight on Boxing Day, Sussex, Oxfordshire, Suffolk, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire, those parts of Essex not yet in Tier 4, Waverley in Surrey, and Hampshire, including Portsmouth and Southampton, but with the exception of the New Forest, will be escalated to Tier 4.

    Bristol, Gloucestershire, Somerset, including the North Somerset Council area, Swindon, the Isle of Wight, New Forest and Northamptonshire, as well as Cheshire and Warrington, will be escalated to Tier 3.

    And I’m afraid Cornwall and Herefordshire have seen sharply rising rates and need to be escalated to Tier 2.

    This is not news that anybody wants to deliver.

    And I am truly sorry for the disruption that it causes.

    But I think people know how important it is that we take decisions like this to keep people safe and to protect the NHS.

    South Africa

    The second piece of new I want to tell you about is developments on another new strain of this virus.

    Of course, the fight against this virus is a global effort.

    And we are constantly vigilant and looking around the world.

    As part of our surveillance, and thanks to the impressive genomic capability of the South Africans, we have detected 2 cases of another new variant of coronavirus here in the UK.

    Both are contacts of cases who have travelled from South Africa over the past few weeks.

    The Chief Scientific Advisor and Chief Medical Officer and others met their South African counterparts over the last day.

    We are incredibly grateful to the South African Government for the rigour of their science, and the openness and the transparency with which they have rightly acted, as we did when we discovered the new variant here.

    This new variant is highly concerning, because it is yet more transmissible and it appeared to have mutated further than the new variant that has been discovered here.

    We have taken the following action.

    First, we are quarantining cases, and close contacts of cases, found here in the UK.

    Second, we are placing immediate restrictions on travel from South Africa.

    Finally, and most importantly, anyone in the UK who has been in South Africa in the past fortnight, and anyone who has been in close contact with anyone who has been in South Africa in the last fortnight, must quarantine immediately.

    By quarantine, I mean they must restrict all contact with any other person whatsoever.

    We will be changing the law to give this legal effect imminently.

    These measures are temporary, while we investigate this further new strain, which is currently being analysed at Porton Down.

    And I want to thank everyone involved for the seriousness with which I know they will take these instructions.

    Testing

    I’d like to now move onto some more positive developments.

    The third thing I wanted to talk about was an update on testing.

    As you know, we continue rapidly to expand testing capacity here in the UK.

    We are expanding community testing yet further in areas where the rate of infection is highest

    So we can identify people, and especially to identify the around 1 in 3 people, who carry the virus without displaying any symptoms at all.

    116 local areas have now signed up for this community testing, and we are in discussion with more.

    These rapid turnaround tests are proving to be extremely effective at finding cases where we otherwise wouldn’t.

    And I am today publishing an assessment of the Liverpool community testing project, which shows how effective this can be.

    I would urge anyone who has the opportunity to take part to protect their local area.

    And at the same time we are boosting rapid testing in care homes, with a further £149 million to support that effort.

    So all those who work in care homes in England will receive 2 rapid tests a week, in addition to their weekly PCR test.

    Vaccines

    Finally, amid all this difficulty, the great hope for 2021 is of course the vaccine.

    The vaccine is our route out of all this.

    And, however tough this Christmas and this winter is going to be, we know that the transforming force of science is helping find a way through.

    I am delighted to be able to announce that the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, developed here in the UK, has submitted its full data package to the MHRA for approval.

    This is the next step towards a decision on the deployment of the vaccine, which is already being manufactured including here in the UK.

    We are, of course, continuing to deploy the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, which is being delivered now from over 500 sites all across the UK, and we are adding more all of the time and we are accelerating the rollout.

    I am also delighted to be able to announce that we have begun vaccination in care homes.

    We know that people who live in care homes are amongst those most vulnerable to this disease, and I’m delighted that we’re able to do this. It is another enormous logistical challenge, and I am very grateful to colleagues in the NHS and social care sector, who have worked so hard together to make this happen.

    This afternoon, it gives me great joy to tell you that the Chelsea Pensioners will be vaccinated, along with care home residents right across the country.

    I think we all need a bit of good news.

    And the reality is this vaccine programme is the we are going to get this.

    Because every time someone is vaccinated, our country becomes a little bit safer, they become a little bit safer and we get a little bit closer to the life that we all want to get back to.

    Achievements this year

    As I sincerely hope this is my last press conference before Christmas.

    I want to take a moment firstly to thank you, and everyone watching, for the sacrifices you’ve made.

    And I want to thank my whole team, who have done so much, including those here, including Susan and Jenny, but including the huge team in the NHS, in the Department and right across the board.

    As a country, we have been faced with the most enormous challenges, and it has been very tough.

    But I especially want to thank those who help this country to become the first in the world to roll out a clinically approved vaccine.

    I want to thank all those that have helped us build a bigger capacity genomic testing than anywhere else in the world – and of course the biggest testing capacity in Europe.

    I want to thank our scientist who discovered the first proven treatment for coronavirus.

    And I want to thank everybody working in the NHS and in social care for the work that they’ve done this year, and also for the work that’s going to carry on this winter.

    And especially to colleagues are going to work over Christmas, which of course is so important in the NHS and in social care.

    Look, I know how hard 2020 has been for everybody.

    And after delivering some really difficult news, if I may I want to end on a reflection about where we are as a country.

    This Christmas, and the start of 2021, is going to be tough.

    The new variant makes everything much harder, because it spreads so much faster.

    But we mustn’t give up now. We know that we can control this virus, we know that we can get through this together.

    We’re going to get through it by suppressing the virus, until a vaccine can make us safe, and that has been our strategy and that’s what we must do.

    And I know that we can do this. We’ve seen so much sacrifice.

    We’re not going to give up now, especially after so much sacrifice.

    I know that some of these decisions are tough.

    But I believe that everybody making the right decisions, and I believe that everybody will do what is needed to keep themselves and others safe, especially this Christmas.

    And I know from the bottom of my heart that there are brighter skies ahead.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on the Need for the PM to Make Statement

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on the Need for the PM to Make Statement

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 19 December 2020.

    It has been apparent for some days that the virus is again out of control in parts of the country. The Government’s tiered system has failed to stem its spread.

    This is an incredibly serious moment and people are worried. The Prime Minister has refused to take action to limit the virus’ spread over Christmas. All he has offered so far is confusion and indecision.

    He must now address the nation to explain what action he will be taking.

  • Nadine Dorries – 2020 Statement on the Ockenden Review

    Nadine Dorries – 2020 Statement on the Ockenden Review

    The statement made by Nadine Dorries, the Minister for Patient Safety, Suicide Prevention and Mental Health, in the House of Commons on 10 December 2020.

    With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I would like to make a statement on the initial report from the Ockenden review, which was published this morning.

    Before I update the House on the findings, I wish to remind the House of the tragic circumstances in which the review was established. It was requested by the Government following concerns raised in December 2016 by two bereaved families whose babies had sadly died shortly following their birth at the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust. I am grateful to my right hon. Friend the Member for South West Surrey (Jeremy Hunt), who, as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, asked NHS Improvement to commission the independent inquiry.

    The inquiry is chaired by senior registered midwife Donna Ockenden, a clinical expert in maternity who was tasked with assessing the quality of previous investigations and how the trust had implemented recommendations relating to newborn, infant and maternal harm. As the report acknowledges, this year the country has rightly united in pride and admiration for our NHS, but we must accept that in the past not everyone has experienced the kindness and compassion from the NHS that they deserved.

    The review team has met face to face with families who have suffered as a result of the loss of brothers and sisters, or who have, from a young age, been carers to profoundly disabled siblings. The team has also met parents in cases where there have been breakdowns in relationships as a result of the strain of caring for a severely disabled child or the grief after the death of a baby or resultant complications following childbirth.

    The original terms of reference for the review covered the handling of 23 cases; however, since its launch more families have come forward and extra cases have been identified by the trust. As a result, the review now covers 1,862 cases, and this has led to an extension of its scope and delivery. An interim report has therefore been published today, and it contains a number of important themes that the review team believe must be shared across all maternity services as a matter of urgency. Indeed, I personally, and the Government, pushed to have this interim report at this point in time so that we could learn from the findings of the inquiry so far.

    This is the first of two reports, based on a review of 250 cases between 2000 and 2018; the second, final report will follow next year. Today’s report makes it clear that there were serious failings in maternity services at the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust. I would like to express my profound sympathies for what the families have gone through. There can be no greater pain for a parent than to lose a child. I am acutely aware that nothing I can say today will lessen the horrendous suffering that these families have been through and continue to suffer. Nevertheless, I would like to give my thanks to all the families who agreed to come forward and assist the inquiry.

    The review team held conversations with more than 800 families who have raised serious concerns about the care they received. I know that it has not been easy for them to revisit painful and distressing experiences, but through sharing their stories we can ensure that no family has to suffer the same pain in the future. From the outset the inquiry wanted families to be central to the team’s work and for their voices to be heard, and I am pleased that the families were able to see the report first, this morning, shortly before it was presented to Parliament. I assure them, and Members of this House, that we are taking today’s report very seriously and that we expect the trust to act on the recommendations immediately.

    I thank Donna Ockenden and her team for their diligent work. Their valuable work provides essential and immediate actions to improve patient safety and ensure that maternity services at the trust are safe. Four of those actions are for the trust and seven are for the wider maternity system. The report sets out clear recommendations for what the trust can do to improve safety relating to overall maternity care, maternal deaths, obstetric anaesthesia and neonatal services.

    The report also sets out actions that can make a difference to the safe provision of maternity services everywhere. They include recommendations on enhancing patient safety and how we can best listen to women and families, developing more effective staff training and ways of working, managing complex pregnancies and risk assessments throughout pregnancies, monitoring foetal wellbeing, and ensuring that patients have enough information to give informed consent. I welcome those recommendations and the others in the report. We will be working closely with NHS England, NHS Improvement and Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust, which have accepted each of the recommendations and will take them forward. We learn from these tragic cases so that we can give patients the safe and high-quality care that they deserve.

    Patient safety is a big priority for me and the Government. We want the NHS to be the safest place in the world to give birth, and this report makes an important contribution towards that goal. Our ambition is to halve the 2010 rates of stillbirths, neonatal and maternal deaths, and brain injuries in babies occurring during or soon after birth by 2025. We have achieved early our ambition of a 20% decrease in stillbirths by 2020, but of course there is always more to do and we owe it to the families to get it right.

    The Ockenden review is an important document that vividly shows the importance of patient safety. I assure the House that we will learn the lessons that must be learned so that the tragic stories found within these pages will never be repeated again. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Justin Madders – 2020 Comments on the Ockenden Review

    Justin Madders – 2020 Comments on the Ockenden Review

    The comments made by Justin Madders, the Shadow Health Minister, on 10 December 2020.

    This is a heart-breaking report that lays bare the tragic consequences of a catalogue of failures in maternity care.

    Strong leadership, challenging poor workplace culture, safe staffing and access to training are all key to improving safety and we must work to ensure this is in place right across the NHS.

    Patient safety must a priority for both health professionals and Ministers, and the tragedies outlined in this review must be learned from and acted upon swiftly by all maternity services so that all women and children receive the best possible care.