The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 930 contributions
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
I am sure that that will be the case, convener.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
I am in your hands, as always, convener.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
Third sector representation is better in some places than it is in others. On how we as a Government interact with the third sector, I speak to the third sector all the time, and it is represented on many of our strategic groups and bodies. With regard to health and social care partnerships in particular, it is fair to say that there is pretty good dialogue with, and representation of, the third sector in some of them—although that is without votes at the table—and not so much in others.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
Yes. You have hit on a really good point. Some folks have seen some very traumatic scenes happen before their eyes. I have heard some pretty bleak stories as I have been doing the rounds and talking to folk. We must ensure that we do our level best for such people.
A number of folk have seen difficult situations, including deaths, in the past but, for many, the pandemic has been so much more than that. We must take cognisance of that and provide the wraparound support that is required.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
In all this, I see it as being my job to ensure that we are doing our level best for everyone. I make no bones about the fact that I think that long waits are unacceptable. We, as a Government, remain committed to meeting the standard that 90 per cent of patients begin treatment within 18 weeks of referral.
I hope that folk will excuse me for this, but I will be a little bit parochial for a minute. When I was first elected to Parliament, CAMHS in Grampian were pretty poor, and I used to get a fair amount of correspondence in my mailbag and inbox about that. Those services have been transformed. Even during this very difficult pandemic, I have had no real complaints about CAMHS in Grampian. If you look at what has happened there during the pandemic, you will see that things have been pretty stable, given the circumstances. The transformation has made a real difference to service delivery. The service is much more community based and is, in some respects, less reliant on acute services.
Our ambition is to ensure that that change happens across the country. It would be fair to say that different health board areas are at different stages in making the change. I am concentrating on speaking to health boards that have not made the shift because, in order for us to meet need, we have to make the change. It is fair to say that quite a lot of my time has been spent challenging health boards about what they can do to make the change.
Some of what is needed might not be so easy to do at the moment, but some of it should be easy to do now, and would make things much better not only for patients, but for staff. Again, I would be more than happy to write to the committee about our ambitions and the standards that we have set. I would even be willing to go down to the level of saying whom I have been speaking to, if that is what you require.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
You have picked a good example of prevention and how we are trying to keep folk out of acute services. School counsellors, which are quite new, are already making a difference. A report was published—Oh, gosh! Do not hold me to this because I am not so sure about times at the moment—a month, six weeks or two months ago on what school counsellors are finding and the difficulties with which young folk are coming to them. The report also gives details of referrals, which are not necessarily just to acute services.
In addition, I have been getting pen pictures of other things that were going on with regard to signposting young folk to the right help. For some young folk, a listening ear is enough; having someone recognise that we are facing a challenge is often all that we need in this life. How many of us actually go to somebody and say, “This is my problem at the moment?” Telling someone and getting a wee bit of advice is cathartic in itself and can be immensely helpful. The huge amount of work that is already going on in the service is quite incredible. Again, we can provide the committee with a link to that work. I think that it is public—I am looking at Donna Bell, here.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
At this moment, we need to see what is required in the here and now. Many members of the committee will have heard me say in my present role and in my previous ministerial role that the way that we should conduct ourselves in that regard is that we should listen to the voices of lived experience. Therefore, over the past six months, I have spent a large amount of my time listening to people out there talk about their current experience of services. Some of that is good, some of it is not so good and some of it is indifferent. What we need to do in the here and now is ensure that the best practice that is out there is exported across the country.
I will give the committee an example, because I think that that is always the best way. The other week at the health awards, NHS Grampian won an award for the Grampian psychological resilience hub, which has been extremely beneficial for lots of people over the pandemic period and in the here and now. A week past Thursday was the first time that I had met anyone from the hub, but I had heard a lot about its work by talking to folk with lived experience.
I know that the committee is soon to do an inquiry on perinatal and infant mental health, which is an area that I have a great interest in. The other week, I met women from the convener’s constituency who are in Let’s All Talk North East Mums—LATNEM—which is the voice of lived experience of women in that corner of Scotland. They told me what was working well and what was not. Everyone there said that the Grampian resilience hub had been a lifeline for them during the pandemic period. We need to ensure that such service delivery happens right across the country.
We know that face-to-face services have not been provided for a long while, although such provision is starting to return. We need to look at what works for people. For the women I spoke to, the resilience hub worked for them. Let us see what we can do to export that best practice beyond Grampian to other places and to do our level best for folk right across the country.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
I do, convener. Good morning to you and the committee, and thank you for the opportunity to appear today.
I welcome the opportunity to set out for the committee my strategic priorities for the current parliamentary session. Right now our national health service and social care systems are under more pressure than they have been at any point in the pandemic, and the Government has responded with a comprehensive programme of investment in and action on our mental health and social care sectors to address the challenges and to build a health and care system that is fit for now and the future. Such a system must focus on people and on meeting their needs in a holistic way that is informed by their experience.
I will start with a brief summary of my vision for mental health and wellbeing. I want our work to focus just as much on supporting and creating the conditions for everyone to have good mental wellbeing as on transforming our mental health services. Our transition and recovery plan, which outlines the breadth of our work, contains more than 100 actions, and we are determined to build on some of the amazing work that has happened across Scotland during the pandemic. That work includes, among countless other things, the establishment of mental health assessment centres and the roll-out of computerised cognitive behavioural therapy.
The plan requires similarly ambitious investment, which is why it is being supported by record levels of funding for mental health. Compared with the previous financial year, we have doubled the mental health budget, with the core budget now standing at more than a quarter of a billion pounds. That includes our £120 million recovery and renewal fund, which is the single largest investment in mental health in the history of devolution. Over £80 million has already been allocated from the fund this year, with £43 million of that for improving the mental healthcare that is received by children and young people, including £40 million for child and adolescent mental health services.
Additionally, we have committed to increasing the direct investment in mental health services by at least 25 per cent, thereby ensuring that by the end of the parliamentary session 10 per cent of our front-line NHS budget will be invested in mental health. Together, those investments will be truly transformational for mental health and wellbeing, and we will continue to work with our partners, stakeholders and people with lived experience to ensure that our response evolves as we continue to recover from the pandemic.
As for social care, I see my priorities falling under three broad headings, the first of which is improving access to care. The pandemic showed and continues to show us the need for a significant improvement in access to care and support for people, and for that work to be done now. For example, I know the pressure that unpaid carers are under, and that situation cannot wait for the national care service to be established. We have therefore committed to overhauling the current eligibility criteria mechanism. We plan to extend to March 2023 the support in the right direction programme, with funding of £2.9 million. We have invested an additional £28.5 million for local carer support.
Secondly, we recognise that the workforce is absolutely vital in delivering our ambitions for social care across Scotland. We must ensure that the principles of fair work are adopted as standard across the sector, and we must improve pay and conditions and career progression for social care workers. Last month, we took a step forward by investing in the social care sector to ensure that front-line care workers receive a minimum of £10.02 per hour, but there is more left to do on that front.
The Government is committed to increasing public investment in social care by 25 per cent during the current parliamentary session, equating to an increase of approximately £840 million. The recent investment to relieve winter pressures will maximise the capacity of care-at-home services, enable more social work assessments to be carried out, and support social care staff.
Finally, we will take forward our commitment to establish a national care service. We have already consulted on our proposals in that space. The independent review of adult social care was clear that, if we are to improve people’s experiences of social care, we need to create a comprehensive system that cares for and supports people in a holistic way that empowers them to thrive. Human rights must be at the heart of all that we do here.
We will introduce legislation for the national care service by the end of this parliamentary year, and aim to establish the national care service by the end of the current parliamentary session.
Convener, I look forward to working closely with you and the committee as we implement this very important agenda.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
As many times as you like, convener.
Health, Social Care and Sport Committee
Meeting date: 16 November 2021
Kevin Stewart
I know that folk will be looking at the framework of regulation, but Mr O’Kane is right that there needs to be cultural change as well. There is no doubt about that. We need to have a human-rights-based approach and listen to what people have to say. That has not been happening in many places throughout the country. Some things that are going on or have gone on in terms of delivery are ludicrous. The consultation talks about getting it right for everyone. That is what our ambition should be but, from some of the stories that I have heard, you would think that, in some cases, the ambition was how to get it wrong for folk, with silly situations that should not happen.
I do not want to go into depth in case I end up identifying circumstances, but we can provide the committee with some of the contributions that were made at the consultation events which, to be frank, show ridiculous instances in which folks have not been held accountable. We have to have accountability to be able to change the culture.