Tag: Sajid Javid

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Tackling Waiting Lists

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Tackling Waiting Lists

    The comments made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 8 November 2021.

    Today’s multi-million pound investment will play a big role in levelling up diagnostics services across the country so patients can get faster results and healthcare professionals can get their job done more easily, reducing unnecessary administrative burden and making every taxpayer’s pound count.

    Getting a faster diagnosis for a health condition is the first step to getting more people the treatment they need and earlier on, and our funding will help ensure our NHS has access to the latest digital technology to drive up efficiency.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in the House of Commons on 20 October 2021.

    The Prime Minister’s announcement of the formation of the antivirals taskforce in April 2021 brought new impetus to the search for potential antiviral treatments for UK covid-19 patients.

    Effective treatments for covid-19 will be vital to manage the risk of infection, as we learn to live with the virus. Covid-19 treatments are especially important for people who cannot take a vaccine for medical reasons or for whom vaccines may be less effective, such as those who are immunocompromised.

    Antivirals may help reduce the development of severe covid-19 and its transmission by targeting the virus at an early stage, preventing progression to more severe disease by blocking virus replication.

    The antivirals taskforce, under the leadership of Eddie Gray, has worked at speed to identify and evaluate potential antiviral candidates that meet the criteria set out by the Prime Minister: oral antivirals which can be taken at home following a positive covid-19 test and are available for deployment this autumn and winter.

    Commercial negotiations have concluded for the first antiviral candidates, with two supply agreements now signed to ensure that they are available for UK patients. We have secured 480,000 patient courses of Molnupiravir from Merck Sharp and Dohme (MSD) along with 250,000 patient courses of PF-07321332 from Pfizer. Payment will only be made, and product delivered following UK market authorisation from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

    Molnupiravir and PF-07321332 are both oral antivirals which can be taken at home to target the SARS-CoV-2 virus, but with different mechanisms of action. Molnupiravir is a ribonucleoside analogue which inhibits viral RNA replication. PF-07321332 is a protease inhibitor which prevents virus replication by selectively binding to viral proteases preventing the cleavage of proteins which are necessary to produce infectious virus particles.

    Should these antivirals receive appropriate MHRA approvals, the UK Government intention is to deploy these treatments to NHS patients via a national study which will allow us to collect further data on how these treatments work in vaccinated patients. The antivirals taskforce is working across the health and care system in the UK, including NHS England and NHS Improvement, UK Health Security Agency, and our partners in the devolved Administrations to plan the deployment of antiviral treatments as more data is available. Our deployment plans will prioritise the most clinically vulnerable to covid-19. The Department of Health and Social Care will publish a further update in due course.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Article on Healthcare

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Article on Healthcare

    The article written by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, published by the Daily Mail and issued by the Government on 14 October 2021.

    Like many Asian parents, my mum always wanted me to be a GP.

    When I told her I’d been made Health and Social Care Secretary, she said: “Well, you didn’t quite make it to GP, but at least you’re working in healthcare!”

    In truth, she was only half joking. There’s a reason why people such as my mum have such high regard for GPs: their powerful blend of expertise and empathy has made generations of communities happier and healthier.

    So I want to say a huge thank you to GPs and their teams across the country for their commitment to patients during the most challenging of times.

    I may not have become a GP, but I do want to make it easier for them to do their vital work. Equally, I am committed to making sure patients can see their GP in the way they choose and have a better experience when they do. The Mail has run an important campaign on this issue.

    Working closely with the NHS, we’ve made a plan for GPs and patients to do just that: it will mean more appointments in the ways people want.

    While I’m determined to get us closer to pre-pandemic levels of face-to-face appointments, it is, of course, true that online and telephone consultations are more convenient for many people.

    There’s no question that telephone and video calls will be a part of the future of general practice. But it cannot be the whole future.

    With winter just around the corner, I know GPs are under real pressure: the demand for appointments is high and so is their workload.

    So today, I’m announcing a fresh £250 million investment in general practice to boost capacity ahead of the winter, opening up more appointments.

    With this money, we will expect GPs to provide clear plans for how they will improve access and deliver more face-to-face appointments, such as offering appointments on evenings and weekends.

    By and large, people understand why it’s been a difficult time for our GPs: coronavirus (COVID-19) pressures, concerns about infection and reduced space in waiting rooms have often made the process of getting an appointment more difficult.

    While I understand the frustration, violence and abuse towards GPs and their teams will never be tolerated.

    GPs and their teams need to feel safe at work, and the NHS is making £5 million available for practices to improve their security measures as part of our plan.

    Another way we’re going to ensure more time is spent with patients is by spreading the workload.

    I want every practice to use the NHS Community Pharmacy Consultation Service, so our brilliant community pharmacists can do more in terms of prescribing.

    I’m asking my department to work with the NHS and look at a ‘Pharmacy First’ scheme for England, so pharmacists can provide treatment for specific conditions such as sore throats, without patients having to go to their GP – building on pilot schemes in England and much as they already do in Scotland.

    We also need to measure GPs against clearer standards. The vast majority of GPs are doing brilliant work but, where GPs are not, we have to fix it: it’s simply not fair for their patients to suffer in silence.

    The challenges in general practice are far from over, but I have every confidence we can meet the difficulties ahead by working together to achieve our common goal – delivering for patients.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Speech to Conservative Party Conference

    The speech made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 October 2021.

    Thank you for that welcome – it’s great to be back together in Manchester.

    When we were last here I talked about how proud my mother was.

    To see me go from living in a small flat above the shop, to living above Downing Street. But I can tell you that she’s even prouder now.

    Like many Asian mothers, she always wanted me to be a doctor… When I told her about this job, she said: “well you didn’t quite make it to GP, but at least you’re working in healthcare!”

    It really is an honour to serve my country again, and to be entrusted with such a critical task at this essential moment. I’ve been in this job for 100 days and I can tell you it’s my toughest job yet. But I’ve been inspired each and every day, by the commitment and dedication, of all those on the frontlines of health and social care.

    The porters, the paramedics, the drivers, the doctors, the nurses, the care workers, the cleaners, the scientists, the vaccinators.

    It’s because of their efforts, and so many others like them… thousands of lives, and millions of livelihoods, have been saved.

    They’ve brought new meaning to the words “public service”. So to all those across the nation who stood up and served their country in this time of peril, we stand, and salute you.

    My priorities are simple:

    Covid.

    Recovery.

    Reform.

    Covid – getting us, and keeping us, out of the pandemic.

    Recovery – tackling the huge backlog of appointments it has caused.

    And reform of our health and social care systems for the long-term.

    Today, I’m going to look forward.

    We can all be here at this conference, and talk about the future, because of the success of the vaccine programme – an amazing example of what public-private collaboration can do.

    Of course, we cannot afford a single dose of complacency.

    This virus has shown itself to be unpredictable.

    But so far our vaccine wall of defence has held firm – and we will keep strengthening it… brick by brick, jab by jab…

    With one of the only national booster programmes in the world.

    We took the difficult decision before the summer, to put our faith in that vaccine wall. Before that was possible, as a country we sacrificed our freedoms and way of life to protect the elderly and vulnerable. But as Conservatives we will never see state control as the default.
    We know the impact that lockdowns have… on jobs, life chances, education, mental health, and everything else.

    And just as we know “government money” is taxpayers’ money… …we know that freedoms ultimately belong to citizens. Because we will always be the party of freeing things up, not locking things down.

    The challenge for us now is this: getting past the peak of the pandemic… won’t mean that we’re suddenly immune from all its effects on our society and our economy.

    When I came in, I said that I was not just the Covid Secretary, but the Health & Social Care Secretary.

    There was no doubt about the biggest item spilling out of my in-tray: an NHS waiting list that will get worse before it gets better… projected to grow as high as 13 million.

    No government, no health secretary, no society can accept that. That’s why we have prioritised elective recovery – check-ups, scans, surgeries… with the biggest catch-up fund in the history of the NHS.

    And we are already delivering… including rolling out surgical hubs, and 40 new Community Diagnostic Centres right across the country.

    As we recover, we must recognise that not everyone, or everywhere, has been affected in the same way.

    The pandemic has been described as a “great leveller”.

    That’s just not true.

    Health disparities in our society – whether regional, racial or socioeconomic – have only deepened under Covid.

    That’s why one of my first visits as Health Secretary was to Blackpool.

    One of the nurses told me that you can trace back entrenched health problems there for over a century.

    Do you know what the gap in healthy life expectancy is, between Blackpool and Richmond upon Thames?

    Almost 20 years.

    It’s time to level up on health.

    The state was needed in this pandemic more than anytime in peacetime.

    But government shouldn’t own all risks and responsibilities in life.

    We as citizens have to take some responsibility for our health too.

    We shouldn’t always go first to the state.

    What kind of society would that be?

    Health – and social care – begins at home.

    Family first, then community, then the state.

    If you do need support… we live in a compassionate, developed country that can afford to help with that.

    There are few higher callings than to care for another person.

    Some of you know that I got up to some antics as a student I got thrown out of party conference, for campaigning against the ERM.

    I was a cool kid.

    What you might not know about my time as a student, back in Exeter, is that every Saturday I would visit a care home as a volunteer
    to keep the residents company. Especially a great lady called Margaret, who I became very fond of. That experience left a real impression on me – of the importance of dignity in our later years, and of the dedication of care workers.

    Now as we all approach our later years… we can plan with confidence that we and our families will be protected from catastrophic costs. This has been a long-term challenge that has been ducked for far too long. And I’m proud to work for a Prime Minister willing to finally take it on.

    So our values as a party, a government, and a country – are clear. Time and again, we choose to prioritise the health of our citizens.
    We have absolutely nothing to prove on that. But it’s also true that if you value something, or someone… you want them to be the best they can be. The NHS may have the best principle behind it, staffed by some of the best people our country has to offer. But that of course doesn’t mean that as an organisation, it is the best at everything.

    It wouldn’t help anyone to pretend otherwise.

    Our undeniable commitment to the NHS is what should drive us to make it as effective as it can be.

    Because ultimately it is our national health service, and is only as good as the service it provides our citizens.

    The public rightly and proudly expect a service that is free at the point of use.

    But they also expect that service to deliver for them – wherever they live in the country.

    They expect to be able to see their GP, in the way that they choose.

    And to have a relationship with their service that goes beyond picking up the pieces when things go wrong.

    In the past, some governments chose cash, others chose reform.

    That’s a false choice.

    You can’t have one without the other. So yes, we will continue to prioritise funding for the NHS in the wake of this global pandemic.

    But I also promise you this:

    2022 will be a year of renewal and reform.

    At a time like this, business as usual cannot be good enough. I’ve worked with some of the largest organisations in the world… and two factors stand out on whether they succeed:

    Leadership, and innovation.

    I want the NHS to embrace innovation and to build a truly modern, digitised system.

    That’s the only way we can drive down that backlog, and build a sustainable service for the future.

    Of course there are some bright spots… but there is a lot of levelling-up to do within the NHS.

    That’s not just about tech – it’s about management, and a focus on outcomes not just inputs.

    And so to help with that mission, I have asked retired General, Sir Gordon Messenger, to lead a review of leadership and management in health and social care. This will be the most far-reaching review since Roy Griffith’s report to Margaret Thatcher in 1983.

    It will shine a light on the outstanding leaders who drive efficiency and innovation, and see how we can replicate that leadership throughout the country. No reform is easy, otherwise it would’ve been done already.

    But if we get it right, no – when we get it right… we won’t build back the way things were.

    We’ll build a future where our health and social care systems are integrated more seamlessly together.

    Where British life sciences lead the world on new treatments.

    Where we have not only the best surgeons, but robots performing live-saving surgeries.

    And where we don’t just treat diseases and ill health, but prevent far more of them from happening.

    This last year will be remembered for decades to come, perhaps even for centuries. People locked in their homes. Closed schools and empty streets. Intensive care units struggling to cope.

    We are emerging now, taking the first steps in a new era. As we go from Covid, to recovery, to reform. This is a time for head and heart. Of compassion but also firmness of purpose.

    Let’s be sure that in generations to come people say they fought the virus, won the peace, and owned the future.

    Let’s make this the era of recovery.

    Let’s make this the era of reform.

    Let’s make this the era in which we truly build back better.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Health and Social Care Leadership

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Health and Social Care Leadership

    The comments made by Sajid Javid, the Health and Social Care Secretary, on 3 October 2021.

    I am determined to make sure the NHS and social care delivers for the people of this country for years to come and leadership is so important to that mission.

    We are committed to providing the resources health and social care needs but that must come with change for the better.

    This review will shine a light on the outstanding leaders in health and social care to drive efficiency and innovation. It will help make sure individuals and families get the care and treatment they need, wherever they are in the country, as we build back better.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Vaccine Being Offered to 12-15 Year Olds

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Vaccine Being Offered to 12-15 Year Olds

    The comments made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 13 September 2021.

    I have accepted the recommendation from the Chief Medical Officers to expand vaccination to those aged 12 to 15 – protecting young people from catching COVID-19, reducing transmission in schools and keeping pupils in the classroom.

    I am very grateful for the expert advice I have received from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation and UK Chief Medical Officers.

    Our outstanding NHS stands ready to move forward with rolling out the vaccine to this group with the same sense of urgency we’ve had at every point in our vaccination programme.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Covid-19 Clinical Trials

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Covid-19 Clinical Trials

    The comments made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 September 2021.

    The UK has been a trailblazer in clinical trials during the pandemic and we must harness that progress to fight future health threats.

    If those who go above and beyond by taking part in clinical trials are disadvantaged in activities such as overseas travel, it threatens the future of medical break-throughs and our ability to combat health threats.

    Participants put themselves forward to benefit the global community and without them, the lives of millions of people worldwide would be in danger due to a lack of progress on new treatments and vaccines.

    I will be urging my G20 health ministerial counterparts to stand up for the rights of those who have helped protect us all and ensure they can live their lives unhindered.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Article in The Times on Covid-19

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Article in The Times on Covid-19

    The article written by Sajid Javid, the Health and Social Care Secretary, in The Times on 28 August 2021. The text of the article was released by HM Government.

    From everything we’ve seen of our extraordinary vaccine rollout, one fact stands out above all others: the more people who get both doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, the easier and faster our return to normal life will be. The vaccines have given us a wall of defence against COVID-19 that, jab-by-jab, is getting stronger every day and the latest stats show that they have saved at least 100,000 lives in England alone.

    When we began the vaccination programme, we asked the JCVI — the independent expert group of clinicians who advise the government on vaccines — to advise us on the order for vaccinations that would save the most lives and protect the most people from severe COVID-19. Their message was clear: start with the oldest and most vulnerable and work your way down.

    Now we have protected the most vulnerable, the JCVI took the step earlier this month to advise that vaccines should be offered to 16- and 17-years-olds, bringing us in line with countries like Sweden, while recommending jabs for 12 to 15 year olds with specific underlying health conditions, or those that are household contacts of someone who is immunosuppressed. Right now they are investigating whether vaccinations could be given to all 12- to 15-year olds, as many other countries, including France, Germany and Italy have already started doing. While we await those findings, one thing is already crystal clear: the main consideration for any decision on vaccinating our young people will always be the risks and the benefits to children themselves.

    For months now, the Delta variant has been sweeping its way across the world. We’ve seen how mutations surface and thrive among unvaccinated people. We know that more the population is protected by a vaccine, the more protection society as a whole will have from Covid-19. It is because of this simple principle, that offering all teenagers the jab would solidify our wall of protection and reduce the amount of infections, decreasing the risk of new variants emerging. If the expert clinicians recommend vaccinating 12 to 15 years olds, I and the fantastic NHS and public health teams are doing everything to make sure we’re ready with the same sense of urgency we’ve had at every point in this programme.

    We have all see the effort that has gone into the vaccination programme, including the different places we could all go and get the vaccine, bringing together all the volunteers and vaccinators, and having a simple way of booking appointments and proving that you have had the jab. All of this took time to bring together. Last year, before the critical milestone of the first vaccine being approved by our medicines regulator and recommended for deployment by the JCVI, the wheels of government and the health service had been in motion for months. Blueprints and plans were being put in place for the most ambitious peacetime mobilisation of volunteers and health workers in our history to administer jabs across the country.

    Looking ahead to the next stage of the vaccine programme today is no different. I have asked the NHS to be ready to roll out jabs to this age group – pending final advice from the JCVI.

    The legwork is being put in across the government, between my Department and the Department of Education, ahead of any decision on both this age group and on the potential for booster vaccines for adults. Discussions have already begun with school vaccination teams to make sure, if the light turns green, they’re ready.

    As a parent myself, I know that people who wouldn’t think twice about getting the jab for themselves will naturally have more questions when it comes to vaccinating their kids. There is no greater priority for a parent than the safety of their child and, you can rest assured: there is no greater priority for me and for the government. We have seen on a daily basis just how safe and just how effective our vaccines are, as we’ve given first doses to over 88% of 16 and overs, and the medicines regulator has approved the use of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines for children aged 12 and above.

    In any vaccination programme aimed at a young age group like this, parents and guardians will have a critical role to play – offering the kind of counsel you can only get from a parent or guardian. And if 12 to 15 year olds are offered the vaccine, parental or carer consent will be sought, just as we do with other school immunisation programmes.

    Jabs at school are fortunately nothing new, and I, like so many others, remember well getting my tetanus, diphtheria and polio jabs at school – which is now a three in one jab – in a packed school hall. Our health service is steeped in experience of vaccination programmes at schools, with a proud tradition that long pre-dates the pandemic. Health leaders are already scoping out what a potential school programme of vaccinations of COVID-19 could look like, when combined with locations like local vaccination sites.

    At the same time, the NHS is already agreeing partnerships with providers to recruit and train school aged immunisation teams, hosting online sessions with providers and local authorities to keep them abreast of contingency plans, and publishing a series of training materials in earnest.

    It has been really fantastic to see that teenagers have been some of the most enthusiastic advocates of COVID-19 vaccines. In recent weeks, 16- and 17- years olds have been coming out in their droves to do their bit, travelling with schoolmates and family members to get the jab at sites like walk-in centres and GPs.

    Anyone with teenagers at home will know just how well clued up they are. They know their stuff and get the huge benefits of being vaccinated. They know it can protect them and protect the adults around them.

    So much of this enthusiasm comes from the fact they’ve seen the chaos COVID-19 can bring first-hand. We should not underestimate the size of the huge sacrifices they’ve had to make. Young people have endured months of sustained disruption to their learning, forced to adjust to learning at a kitchen table with many tired parents moonlighting as substitute teachers. It has also been an isolating experience for a great many teens, being denied the kind of formative experiences you can only get when you pass through the school gates.

    While we await the advice of our scientific experts, we are doing what responsible government’s do and preparing for as many eventualities as possible. Whatever the advice says, I have no doubt we’ll continue to see the same sense of public spirit and shared responsibility that young people have exemplified at every point of this pandemic.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Vaccination

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Vaccination

    The comments made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 26 August 2021.

    The UK’s phenomenal vaccination programme has made a life-changing difference to tens of millions of people across the country, and we’re quickly closing in on 100,000 lives being saved in England alone.

    With 82,100 hospitalisations prevented in over-65s and almost 24 million infections prevented across England, the vaccines are continuing to keep all of us safe. It’s also hugely encouraging to see over 62,000 pregnant women taking up the offer and ensuring they and their babies are protected from this dangerous disease.

    The vaccines are free and available at hundreds of locations around the UK – please get your jabs to secure this protection for yourself and your loved ones and help us reclaim our lost freedoms.

  • Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Support for Veterans

    Sajid Javid – 2021 Comments on Support for Veterans

    The comments made by Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 25 August 2021.

    I recognise that the experience of conflict can affect the physical and mental wellbeing of our veterans, and that the events currently taking place in Afghanistan may have a detrimental impact on the mental health of those who served there.

    I am committed to ensuring our veterans can access the support they need. The NHS already provides incredible mental health support for our veteran community, but I know there is more to do.

    I encourage any veteran who is struggling to cope to reach out for help. Services like Op COURAGE and the Veterans’ Gateway helpline are there for you, so please come forward.