Tag: Jonathan Ashworth

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Performance Statistics

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2021 Comments on NHS Performance Statistics

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 14 January 2021.

    These figures show the alarming and sustained pressure the NHS has been under for months now – impacting all areas of treatment. Hospitals are struggling to deliver urgent care in the most difficult of circumstances, while over 190,000 people have now been waiting over a year for treatment.

    Years of underfunding, bed cuts and understaffing left our NHS exposed when the Coronavirus epidemic hit us. It is vital that we now have a Herculean effort to roll out at least two million vaccines a week, with NHS staff vaccinations completed in the next week, to ease pressure on our NHS.

  • 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.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Government’s Press Conference on 23 December

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Government’s Press Conference on 23 December

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 December 2020.

    Families across the country will be understandably alarmed and anxious at the escalation in the prevalence of this horrific virus.

    Ministers need to act quickly. The usual Boris Johnson dither has disastrous consequences. It’s fiercely urgent that ministers increase vaccination roll out to save lives and minimise harm.

  • 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.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on the Appointment of a Vaccines Minister

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on the Appointment of a Vaccines Minister

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 28 November 2020.

    Only days ago Labour called for a Vaccines Minister to oversee the huge logistical challenge of widespread vaccination.

    We now need a mass public health campaign urging uptake of the vaccine, alongside ensuring the resources are in place for GPs and other health professionals to rapidly roll this out as soon as possible.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on a Minister for the Vaccine

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on a Minister for the Vaccine

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 November 2020.

    After months of sacrifice, people are looking forward with hope to a vaccine that will save lives and provide a route out of lockdown restrictions. But after the ministerial mistakes over the procurement of PPE and the £12 billion for the failing Test and Trace system, nobody wants yet more avoidable mishaps.

    Boris Johnson must reassure the country that Ministers have the resources and plans in places to deliver the vaccination programme as promised.

    We need a Herculean effort to achieve the roll-out of a vaccine at a magnitude and scale unlike any we have ever seen before. Our NHS has gone above and beyond this year but is exhausted and overstretched. We can’t limp into the next crucial period of our battle with coronavirus, the government must urgently provide the resources necessary to ensure the speedy and smooth deployment of a vaccine. The necessary plans need to be in place now.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Prime Minister’s Response to Priti Patel Report

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Prime Minister’s Response to Priti Patel Report

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 22 November 2020.

    Two days ago Tory MPs ordered to tweet effusive, over the top praise for Priti Patel.

    Fast forward to Sunday & Tory sources briefing she is now set to be demoted.

    After Cummings, exams fiasco, free school meals and gazillions of other u turns, when will these Tory MPs learn?

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on NHS Performance Statistics

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on NHS Performance Statistics

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Health Secretary, on 12 November 2020.

    The winter has come early for the NHS with the worst October on record for trolley waits and almost 140,000 people now waiting in pain and distress beyond a year for a treatment. Trolley waits at these levels are unacceptable at the best of times but in a Covid pandemic when infection control is so crucial this is dangerous and concerning for patients and staff.

    Years of underfunding, bed cuts and understaffing left our NHS exposed when the Coronavirus epidemic hit us.

    It is vital that the upcoming Spending Review delivers the resources our health and care services need to bring waiting times down, provide quality Covid care and lead the roll out of a vaccine.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Speech on Restrictions in South Yorkshire

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Speech on Restrictions in South Yorkshire

    The speech made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in the House of Commons on 21 October 2020.

    I thank the Minister of State for advance sight of his statement. Today, we have another great swathe of the north put into lockdown. Sheffield went into tier 2 restrictions last Wednesday, so did Ministers make the wrong judgment a week ago or has new evidence come to light that was not apparent last Wednesday? How many other areas in tier 2 today are facing the same fate as Sheffield, such as those areas in tier 2 that neighbour South Yorkshire, such as North East Derbyshire or Nottinghamshire?

    The Secretary of State could not answer yesterday the question of how long Greater Manchester will be in lockdown, or what the criteria will be for leaving lockdown, so can the Minister of State today tell us how long South Yorkshire will be in lockdown? Does the nationwide R number need to fall below 1, as the Prime Minister suggested last week, or just the regional R number? Or, if an area such as Doncaster gets the R below 1, will it be able to leave lockdown?

    The Prime Minister at the Dispatch Box earlier talked about hospital admissions, so could the Minister tell us what level hospital admissions need to come down to for an area to exit lockdown?

    As I said yesterday, my dad worked in casinos in Salford and my mum worked in bars. I know people will want to do the right thing and will understand that further measures are necessary to contain the spread of the virus, but families should not face financial ruin. The Minister wants congratulations for the package he has allocated to South Yorkshire, but why is contact tracing funding subject to the negotiations and deals? The virus is out of control because of the failures of the £12 billion test and trace system. If local areas had been given the resources months ago to put in place effective contact tracing, we would not be in this situation now. Those failures on contact tracing are having a direct impact on people’s lives.​

    This afternoon, families across South Yorkshire who work in hospitality—whether in Doncaster, Sheffield, Penistone, Rother Valley or Don Valley—will be asking why, if it was fair to pay 80% of wages in March, they should now be expected to get by on just two thirds of their wages in the run-up to Christmas. This matters to families everywhere, because we know that further restrictions will be needed. Indeed, according to sources briefing Times Radio, plans are being developed for a three-week lockdown more widely next month. Perhaps the Minister could confirm that his officials are now working on plans for a three-week national lockdown next month.

    The Communities Secretary said this morning that there was now a national formula for areas under local lockdown, but Ministers say they want a targeted local approach because circumstances vary. Yet when an area such as Greater Manchester, which has had restrictions since July, says, “Our circumstances are different,” the Prime Minister says, “Tough. Hard luck. You can’t be treated any differently,” and vindictively refuses Greater Manchester just £5 million extra to get a deal over the line. This is playing politics with people’s jobs and people’s livelihoods. We cannot defeat this virus on the cheap, nor should it be broken on the backs of the lowest paid. Public health restrictions must go hand in hand with economic support, because as night follows day, falls in employment lead to rises in chronic illness. The Chancellor must pay out to help out, and deliver a fair deal to support jobs and livelihoods under lockdown.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on NHS Performance Statistics

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on NHS Performance Statistics

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 8 October 2020.

    This is a staggering increase in people waiting beyond 12 months for treatment. It means people suffering longer in pain and distress and is simply unacceptable. Everyone understands the pressures facing the NHS but ministers have a responsibility to bring forward plans to ensure people receive the treatment they need on time.