Tag: Jonathan Ashworth

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Waiting List Statistics

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Waiting List Statistics

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Health and Social Care Secretary, on 14 October 2021.

    The NHS is in crisis. Waiting lists are at record levels with more and more patients forced to pay for operations.

    GP numbers have gone down, and it’s no wonder Sajid Javid has run away from defending his latest policy announcement in front of doctors – his promise is already unravelling.

    The money announced today will mean about £33,000 extra per practice; nowhere near enough to deliver the change needed for patients. In 2019 the Tories pledged to deliver 6,000 extra GPs, and ahead of a tough winter, patients are asking why they have broken that promise.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Sajid Javid’s Conference Speech

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Sajid Javid’s Conference Speech

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Health and Social Care Secretary, on 5 October 2021.

    This was an empty speech that will hugely disappoint the many thousands of patients who are anxious and scared, those waiting longer for cancer treatment or surgery, those waiting for a doctor’s appointment and those increasingly forced to pay for surgery.

    Tory MPs have imposed a punishing, unfair tax rise on working people yet Ministers have no plan to rebuild and reform health care to bring waiting times down and deliver the quality care people deserve.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Speech to Labour Party Conference

    The speech made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 28 September 2021.

    I start by simply saying, thank you.

    Thank you to those who gave so much and so selflessly. Our national heroes: NHS and care staff. Thank you for your commitment, courage, compassion and care.

    Friends let us rise and say thank you to our nurses, health visitors, midwives, and doctors. Thank you to our health care assistants, care workers, paramedics, cleaners, porters and vaccinators.

    Thank you to all our NHS and care staff.

    As you cared for us, we will care for you with the training, recruitment, wellbeing support and the fair pay rise you deserve.

    And we give you this commitment too: never again should we allow fatal delays to PPE to leave nurses wearing bin bags. Never again should workers be denied the sick pay that is their right. Never again should care homes be left unprotected as a virus rages. So we demand a public inquiry, so that mistakes like this – never again.

    I also want to thank you in this room and in our communities. I want to thank our councillors and our trade unions too. You ran the mutual aid groups, volunteered at the food banks, helped the vulnerable shielding. You gave your time, you offered your energies and at those moments when everything seemed so frighteningly bleak, you kept hope alive. So today, we say thank you to you as well.

    I’m honoured to be here as your Shadow Health and Social Care Secretary and I’m pleased and privileged to work with the very best shadow ministerial team: Rosena Allin-Khan, Liz Kendall, Justin Madders, Alex Norris. In the Lords: Glenys Thornton, Gillian Merron and Margaret Wheeler. Fighting to halt the Tory NHS Bill, fighting to bring services back in house, fighting to reinstate a universal public NHS.

    An understaffed NHS has been pushed to the brink, no one is pretending the NHS hasn’t been impacted by 18 months of covid. But let’s not pretend – pre covid – the NHS wasn’t impacted by ten years of the Tories. We entered the pandemic with the longest financial squeeze in NHS history, 17,000 beds closed, hospitals crumbling, public health services cut, GP numbers down, services privatised, nurse training cut, children’s mental health budgets raided, thousands waiting longer for cancer treatment, the 18 week target not met for 5 years, the A&E target not met for 6 years.

    So the NHS is in crisis not simply because of covid. The NHS is in crisis because of the Conservatives. And it has the devastating consequence of forcing more and more people in pain and desperation to take out loans and crowdfunding on the internet to pay for an operation because the wait too much to bear.

    £12,000 for a hip replacement,
    £9,000 for a knee replacement,
    £3,000 for a hernia.

    A two-tier health system, privatisation by the backdoor. That’s the Tory threat to our NHS. That’s what we’re fighting against to rebuild our NHS.

    Access to health should not depend upon wealth, that’s why this party created a National Health Service free at the point of use as a right for everyone irrespective of wealth.

    In place of fear, we offered hope and we do so again.

    A Keir Starmer Labour Government will bring waiting times down again. We’ll transform cancer care and ensure a doctors’ appointment when you need one. But the challenges facing the NHS today dwarf anything it’s faced in its history.

    Society is aging, long term chronic illness more prevalent, infectious disease hasn’t gone away and climate change is the biggest health threat we face – there is no healthy future without a green future.

    Our mission is more than a health service that just cures the sick. Our commitment is to help people stay well from the moment they enter this world to their very final breaths. There is a saying: “Health is made at home. Hospitals are for repairs.” It captures a fundamental truth: that health is created in our communities and depends upon the conditions in which we live.

    If covid has taught us anything, surely it’s that poverty makes people ill and the ill are often trapped in poverty. It was the poorest most likely to be admitted to hospital with covid. It was the poorest twice as likely to die from covid.

    After a decade of the Tories life expectancy has gone backwards.

    I say to these Tories: don’t lecture us about levelling up when you’ve spent ten years smashing down.

    So because we know blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking hits the worst off hardest leading to cancers, heart failure or stroke we’ll drive up access to health checks and rather than cutting smoking cessation services – we’ll protect them.

    Place of birth should not determine length of life and to change that, we start with children. A child born into poverty is too often condemned to a life of ill health. More likely to be admitted to hospital, more likely to leave school obese, more likely to suffer mental ill health.

    Surely it is a scandal that we fail so many children so often even before their life’s journey has begun. So we’ll put in place the biggest children’s health and wellbeing strategy ever seen. We’ll ensure no child is denied the mental health care they need. We’ll strengthen health visiting and improve maternity care. We’ll take bold action on childhood obesity and nutrition.

    Drawing inspiration from Marcus Rashford we’ll ensure the poorest young children receive fresh fruit, vegetables and vitamins as we attack child hunger. A hungry child cannot be a healthy child.

    Keeping people well means confronting something that casts a shadow over so many families: dementia. It can start with forgetting little things, silly things, the keys, glasses, perhaps the day of the week. There comes a moment when you see your loved one in difficulty trying to remember the steps involved in something so simple like making a cup of tea.

    Dementia cruelly changes the person you love and you assume there will be proper help. But so often there’s not. It’s a struggle to access a memory clinic just to get a diagnosis. And when that diagnosis comes you’re often left abandoned to battle a complex, demoralising system only to be told – as 3,000 are every day – you or your loved one doesn’t qualify for care.

    This social care system is broken. It sees the frail and confused trapped in hospital beds with nowhere to go. It sees short inadequate 15 minute visits and for adults with severe autism and learning disabilities it can mean being locked up in a room with a foam mattress and food shoved through a hatch in a door.

    That’s an affront to a civilised society, that’s shameful. We’re going to end it.

    So we will fix social care with a plan as far reaching as Nye Bevan’s plan for the NHS. With personalised care to help people stay at home. Care will be seamless, delivered hand in hand with the NHS. We’ll end zero hours contracts and pay our care workers at least the living wage – the fair pay they truly deserve.

    This is about more than the care system. One in three people born this year will develop dementia. It has no cure. But throughout the history of the NHS, the genius of medical science has discovered advances whose reach may exceed our grasp today but soon become the routine treatments of tomorrow.

    Let us glimpse the possibilities of the future.

    A Labour government will double current funding for dementia research to play our part in finding a cure. Just as Labour led the world in creating a National Health Service in the twentieth century, we offer hope and will lead again to build a national care service in the twenty first.

    We offer hope for the best quality health care for all in a public NHS. Hope for nurses, care workers and NHS staff as we repay their dedication. Hope to end the inequalities that covid exposed, hope for every child to have the healthiest start in life.

    Our commitment shows it, our history proves it. With health the foundation from cradle to grave. The hope of a stronger future together.

    Now, friends, let’s build it.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Waiting Lists

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Waiting Lists

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 9 September 2021.

    The numbers of patients waiting longer than 18 weeks continues to grow and means more people left languishing in pain and distress for treatment.

    This week Ministers unveiled a punishing tax rise on working people yet utterly failed to offer any credible plan, or answer basic questions about a time frame for bringing this record waits down.

    The last Labour government had a detailed plan that brought waiting times down from 18 months to 18 weeks. It is a scandal that patients wait so long under the Tories.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Health Visitors Petition

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Health Visitors Petition

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Health Secretary, on 23 August 2021.

    Children’s health and well-being should be an absolute priority for ministers, especially after these last 18 months. Health Visitors are central to making sure the health of every child matters.

    Instead, health visitor numbers have been cut and ministers have dismissed the concerns of those calling for health visitors to be given the backing and resources needed.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Pay Rise

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Pay Rise

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 22 July 2021.

    In a sleight of hand Sajid Javid is refusing to back up the £2.2 billion pay settlement with the cash needed, instead expecting overstretched hospitals to find this extra money.

    The NHS is in a summer crisis with rising Covid admissions, cancer operations cancelled, emergency demand intensifying and ambulance trusts under pressure.

    The NHS needs a fully funded plan to provide quality care, and bring ballooning waiting lists down. Alongside this, Ministers must provide the NHS with the extra investment required to give staff a pay rise.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Covid-19

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Covid-19

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health, on 19 July 2021.

    Firstly can I say of course people have the right to protest against a lockdown that no longer exists, but will he join me in condemning the ugly scenes of harassment, pushing, thuggishness, throwing of objects and intimidation directed at police officers outside on Parliament Square earlier?

    On vaccinating adolescents, The MHRA have approved the Pfizer Jab for 12–18-year-olds. The US, Canada, Israel, France, Austria, Spain, and Hong Kong have started or will start vaccinating 12 -18 year olds.

    Risk of death to children from covid is mercifully very low. But children can become very sick from and develop long covid. According to the ONS 14.5% of children aged 12-16 have symptoms lasting longer than 5 weeks.

    Can he spell out in detail the clinical basis as to why the JCVI have made this decision, will he publish all their analysis and can he guarantee this decision was made on medical grounds not on grounds of vaccine supply?

    Infections levels among children have been hugely disruptive for learning. So what is his plan for September when children return to school? Will he support schools to install air filtration units this summer?

    Testing is already stretched with turnaround times lengthening. Can he guarantee that through the summer – especially when contacts can be released from isolation on the back of a negative PCR, and September when schools return, will there be sufficient PCR testing capacity to meet demand?

    We anticipate more flu and respiratory virus – illnesses with overlapping symptoms to covid. Will he invest now in our testing capacity so alongside a covid test it will be possible to test for flu and RSV as well? We will need this multi-pathogen testing this winter.

    Three weeks ago the Health Secretary told us unlocking would make us healthier and promised it would be irreversible. But today with some of the highest infection case rates in the world the mayor from jaws has decided to reopen the beaches recklessly throwing off of all restrictions with no safety precautions in place like mandatory mask wearing.

    It risks re-imposing new restrictions in the future. It means the NHS facing a summer crisis.

    Admissions for covid are already 550 a day. And hospitals are cancelling cancer surgery; liver transplant operation cancelled at Birmingham.

    Throwing all restrictions like this will see thousands suffer serious long term illness. The clinically vulnerable and scared are feeling shut out of society.

    Selection pressure could see a new variant setting us back and evading vaccines – snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. More infections, mean more isolation.

    NHS staff will be released from isolation if doubled jabbed. But they and the patients they care for need protection, so will he upgrade the standards of masks to FFP3 for health care workers?

    Which brings me to Prime Minister and Chancellor who sought to dodge isolation. So can he tell us how this “random” clinical trial that so helpfully “randomly” selected the Prime Minister, the Chancellor and the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster was set up?

    What exactly happened between 8.00am and 10.38 am on Sunday, that persuaded the Prime Minister and Chancellor to withdraw from this presumably valuable clinical ‘random’ study? How many other ministers have participated in this trial? And how many government departments and officials were involved and why? Or should we just simply conclude its one rule for Tory ministers and another for the rest of us?

  • Jonathan Reynolds – 2021 Comments on Cuts to Universal Credit

    Jonathan Reynolds – 2021 Comments on Cuts to Universal Credit

    The comments made by Jonathan Reynolds, the Shadow Secretary for Work and Pensions, on 14 July 2021.

    The Government’s plan to cut Universal Credit for millions of families by £1,000 a year is morally and economically wrong.

    Under this Government millions of children are already living in poverty; this cut will only make things harder.

    It is time the Government saw sense, backed struggling families and cancelled their cut to Universal Credit. Labour would replace Universal Credit with a fairer social security system .

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Covid Passports for Pubs

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on Covid Passports for Pubs

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Health Secretary, on 10 July 2021.

    The NHS is in crisis as Covid admissions climb, cancer treatments delayed, waiting times increase and pressures intensify.

    Sajid Javid has no plan to support NHS staff through the summer. Their only response is to talk about removing the batteries from the smoke alarm by watering down the NHS app and looking at ID cards for pubs.

    Boris Johnson’s recklessness in throwing all caution to the wind is creating a summer of chaos.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Letter to Simon Case on NHS Chief Executive

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Letter to Simon Case on NHS Chief Executive

    The letter sent by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, to Simon Case, the Cabinet Secretary, on 19 June 2021.

    Dear Mr Case,

    Re: Appointment of Chief Executive of NHS England

    I am writing to you today to set out my concerns and expectations for the appointment of the next Chief Executive of NHS England.

    Given the widespread outrage at the way in which cronyism has driven ministerial decision making these 15 months, I hope you will agree this appointment process must be entirely open, transparent and seen to be based on merit.

    This is one of the most important roles in healthcare in the world and the role holder must be able to deliver for both patients and NHS staff.

    The NHS has played a vital role in keeping the country safe during the pandemic. But the reality is that the NHS and healthcare services in this country entered the crisis on the back of have years of underfunding, neglect and cuts that meant we already had the highest waiting lists on record, the lowest number of beds on record, and over 100,000 vacancies.

    Before the pandemic hit, over 4 million people were on the waiting list for NHS treatment, and thousands of them were waiting too long for vital mental health, cancer care and elective surgery.

    Over the course of the pandemic, waiting lists have rocketed further leaving almost 400,000 people waiting over a year for treatment, missed cancer targets month after month and a ballooning waiting list for mental health care.

    Failure to act to bring these waiting lists down can translate into serious concerns for health outcomes on cancer, stroke, heart attacks and mental health. The IPPR estimate that there could be 4,500 avoidable cancer deaths alone this year, and 12,000 avoidable deaths from heart attacks and strokes.

    The crisis has particularly impacted mental health care – an area where years of neglect had already weakened the NHS. Over 200,000 fewer people have been referred for psychological therapies this year and waits for eating disorders are growing as services in some areas have been descried by psychiatrists as being ‘completely overwhelmed’.

    Putting in place a fully funded rescue plan for the NHS to bring waits downs and deliver quality care is priority for NHS staff, patients and me. It must be a priority for the next Chief Executive.

    The recovery from the pandemic will impact the health of a generation and the Chief Executive of NHS England will play a pivotal role in this. The candidate therefore, will need a track record of delivering improved outcomes for patients. The task ahead of them is monumental. The successful candidate must be able to improve waiting lists, modernise care and lead the NHS into the future.

    Our NHS staff, who are now facing a real-terms pay cut, are exhausted after over a year of fighting covid. Many are suffering from Long covid, and both clearing the backlog of NHS treatment and the Prime Minister’s aim of ‘learning to live with Covid’ will place a considerable burden on staff. Services will be expected to operate at increased capacity whilst continuing to work within infection control measures, reduced bed numbers and increased ICU capacity. It is therefore vital that the candidate can command the respect and trust of NHS staff. Staff will want reassurances that the head of the organisation will be their champion when discussing pay and working conditions with Ministers.

    Given the deepest concerns about cronyism in healthcare during the pandemic – around PPE and testing contracts not to mention the poor performance of outsourced services such as Test and Trace, it is understandable that patients and NHS staff have concerns about this appointment process. I am therefore seeking your assurances that the process will be free from the cronyism that has existed over the past year.

    This is a matter of the upmost importance for both patients and NHS staff, as the holder of this role will shape the future of the health service and arguably the most critical time in its history. The process must be entirely transparent, based on merit, and without undue political influence.

    I urge you to take action to make the recruitment and selection process public and subject to proper scrutiny to ensure that there is proper confidence in the next holder of this important role.

    I will be releasing a copy of this letter to the press and look forward to your response.

    Yours sincerely,

     

    The Rt Hon Jonathan Ashworth MP

    Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care