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Elective Treatment

08 February 2022

Lead MP

Sajid Javid

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

NHSEmployment
Other Contributors: 24

At a Glance

Sajid Javid raised concerns about elective treatment in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

NHSEmployment
Government Statement
The NHS, responding with distinction during the pandemic, faced unprecedented challenges, including over 700,000 hospital admissions for COVID-19 and a vaccination programme that helped manage living with the virus. Despite this, non-COVID care was impacted, leading to a backlog of elective care cases increasing from around 1,600 before the pandemic to over 300,000 currently, with an overall waiting list of 6 million people in England. To address this, Javid announced £2 billion for elective recovery and another £8 billion over three years, alongside nearly £6 billion for capital investment for new beds, equipment, and technology. The plan aims to perform at least 9 million extra tests by 2025 and deliver around 30% more elective activity per year compared to pre-pandemic levels in three years' time. Key areas include increasing capacity through recruitment of healthcare workers and expanding use of the independent sector; prioritising care based on clinical need, with ambitious targets for reducing waiting times and disparities; redesigning services by expanding community diagnostic centres and surgical hubs; and improving patient information and support via an online platform called My Planned Care.

Shadow Comment

Wes Streeting
Shadow Comment
The Labour MP criticised the plan as insufficient, noting that it falls short of addressing workforce shortages and does not contain a comprehensive workforce strategy. He highlighted that there are currently 93,000 staffing vacancies in the NHS and argued for more staff with reduced workload pressures. Streeting also pointed out that half a million patients suspected of having cancer have not been seen in time and that heart and stroke victims wait over two hours for an ambulance. He claimed this is not due to COVID but rather 'Tory mismanagement' before the pandemic, citing record waiting lists, staff shortages, fewer beds, and social care vacancies pre-pandemic.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

About House of Commons Debates

House of Commons debates take place in the main chamber of the House of Commons. These debates cover a wide range of topics including government policy, legislation, and current affairs. MPs from all parties can participate, question ministers, and hold the government accountable for its decisions.