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NHS Workforce Expansion
28 February 2023
Lead MP
Grahame Morris
Debate Type
General Debate
Tags
NHSEmployment
Other Contributors: 6
At a Glance
Grahame Morris raised concerns about nhs workforce expansion in the House of Commons. Other MPs contributed to the debate.
How the Debate Unfolded
MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:
Lead Contributor
Opened the debate
The debate focuses on the underinvestment in the National Health Service, particularly regarding the cancer workforce and radiotherapy services. Mr Morris emphasises the worsening performance of NHS cancer services since 2010 due to recruitment and retention issues, noting that waiting times have worsened every year since then. He highlights the importance of addressing the crisis in cancer care and improving patient survival rates through better utilisation of the existing workforce.
Grahame Morris
Lab
Easington
Morris underscores the critical nature of radiotherapy access, citing a shortfall in specialist staff despite its cost-effectiveness and potential to cure cancer patients. He cites Cancer Research UK's forecast predicting over 500,000 new cancer cases by 2024, emphasising that current workforce levels and equipment cannot meet future demand.
Hollern addresses the broader issue of NHS underinvestment, focusing on ambulance staff shortages. She points out significant increases in unfilled posts for paramedics and discusses the reliance on private staffing solutions which are not sustainable over time. She also critiques the failure to meet cancer treatment targets amid workforce shortages.
Alex Cunningham
Lab
Stockton North
Staffing in the NHS is at crisis point. The demand for senior roles such as consultants, specialist paediatric nurses and theatre staff cannot be met. Nurses are being recruited from far afield including the Philippines to fill these gaps. A new diagnostic centre in Stockton aims to provide better working conditions but a new hospital is needed to address health inequalities. Palliative care workers face training and recruitment challenges; there's a need for end-of-life care training within initial and continuing professional development. A long-term funding settlement is required to attract and retain sufficient staff, especially as the number of people aged 85 years and over will almost double in the next 25 years.
Fleur Anderson
Lab
Putney
Conservative's 13-year tenure has worsened NHS conditions. Over 7 million people are waiting for treatment, impacting their quality of life significantly. There is a high vacancy rate with over 47,000 nurse and doctor shortages. A&E staff at St George’s Hospital describe it as the worst situation since the pandemic due to space limitations and corridor care. Gaps in community care exist for critical needs like eating disorders, Korsakoff dementia patients, stroke recovery, FND treatment, breastfeeding support, and end-of-life care. Urgent investment is required to reverse a 47% reduction in district nursing staff. Labour’s plan includes doubling medical places, delivering more clinical placements for nursing and midwifery, and training twice as many district nurses per year.
Andrew Gwynne
Ind
Gorton and Denton
Commemorated contributions from other Labour MPs, criticised the Government for having no plan to address the NHS crisis, highlighted shortages of doctors and nurses, accused the Government of wasting time on unworkable bills instead of addressing workforce issues. Proposed a Labour plan to double medical school places, train more district nurses, mental health professionals, and increase nursing placements. Criticised the Government's support for non-doms over NHS staff.
Maria Caulfield
Con
Lewes
Pays tribute to NHS staff, criticises the Opposition for 'talking down' the NHS. Mentions achievements such as treating more patients and reducing stillbirths by 21%. She highlights failures of the previous Labour government including MRSA issues and PFI scandal. Emphasises current investments in infrastructure (40 hospitals being built) and workforce (50,000 more nurses planned). Criticises Labour's non-dom tax plan as ineffective for NHS transformation.
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Assessment & feedback
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