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Covid-19: Effect on People with Learning Disabilities

15 December 2020

Lead MP

Chris Matheson
City of Chester
Lab

Responding Minister

Helen Whately

Tags

Social CareEmploymentWomen & EqualitiesMental Health
Word Count: 9877
Other Contributors: 6

At a Glance

Chris Matheson raised concerns about covid-19: effect on people with learning disabilities in Westminster Hall. A government minister responded.

Key Requests to Government:

The Government should clarify exemptions for cross-border travel to ensure access to valued activities and care. It must review guidance on hospital visits by carers and address the issue of non-verbal cues missed during remote consultations. The Minister should commit to providing adequate support to improve understanding of learning disabilities across healthcare staff, ensuring face-to-face consultations and prioritising specialist training.

How the Debate Unfolded

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

Lead Contributor

City of Chester
Opened the debate
Health inequality for people with learning disabilities has been evident for decades, leading to three preventable deaths every day. The pandemic exacerbated these issues by reducing access to vital care and support, increasing isolation and loneliness, and highlighting the digital exclusion faced by this group. During the peak of the pandemic, 21% of cases indicated a need for reasonable adjustments that were not made, resulting in disproportionately high hospital mortality rates among people with learning disabilities. The lack of awareness about these individuals' needs, diagnostic overshadowing, and wrongful denial of life-saving treatment further complicate matters.

Government Response

Helen Whately
Government Response
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Ghani. I thank the hon. Member for City of Chester (Christian Matheson) for securing a debate on this very important topic. The pandemic has impacted everybody, but many of those with learning disabilities have been particularly hard hit. We commissioned Public Health England to analyse the information about deaths for people with learning disabilities in order to understand the impact of covid-19 and ensure that we could take every possible step to protect people. Its report estimated that, in the first wave, people with learning disabilities had a mortality rate from covid-19 that was between 4.1 and 6.3 times higher than the general population. We have worked continuously to protect people throughout the pandemic. That has included introducing the infection control fund, now totalling £1.1 billion, to ensure that care settings are covid-secure. We are providing free PPE for adult social care providers until March 2021 and extending asymptomatic testing not only across care homes but to domiciliary care staff. The Care Quality Commission is looking into the concern about inappropriate DNACPR recording in patient records. I am working with Health Education England and Skills for Care to develop mandatory training to ensure that all staff have the skills and understanding they need. We welcomed the news of a vaccine against covid and shared with the JCVI the latest evidence on people with learning disabilities and covid, including the Public Health England work. The JCVI's advice stated that people on the clinically extremely vulnerable list, including those with Down's syndrome, should be in priority group four for vaccination. We are continually looking at the evidence and at what more is possible to do to keep people safe. I have asked the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies care working group to consider the findings in the Public Health England and LeDeR reports to help us develop further targeted actions. The Department has commissioned research to better understand the impact of the pandemic on the wellbeing and lives of people with a learning disability, which is being led by the University of Warwick and Manchester Metropolitan University. We advised care homes to use rapid tests that we are providing, together with PPE and other infection control measures, to enable safer visiting. The clinical advice is very strong on saying that those returning to a care setting after a visit out should quarantine for 14 days because there may well be people who are clinically extremely vulnerable in the setting.
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About Westminster Hall Debates

Westminster Hall debates are a chance for MPs to raise important issues affecting their constituents and get a response from a government minister. Unlike Prime Minister's Questions, these debates are more in-depth and collaborative. The MP who secured the debate speaks first, other MPs can contribute, and a minister responds with the government's position.