Results 1181–1200 of 4000 for speaker:Vaughan Gething

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I shall remind you of your recognition that we have to accept some projects won't succeed, if that happens. But, look, the cultural change point you make is one that I accept completely. But the transformation fund particularly will help to kick-start new models of care. That will be part of generating cultural change, but it won't do it in itself. If I said the transformation fund was the...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: Since the introduction of special measures, we have announced a range of improvement frameworks, a range of actions and support that we have taken. Of course, I'll be dealing with more of this in question 3, but you will have noticed over the summer, for example, the additional £6.8 million of investment we've made within the health board. The reasons why the health board performance has...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I of course want Betsi Cadwaladr to succeed. I want it to deliver the sort of quality of healthcare that each of us, in every single community, would expect. Your proposal to break up the health board is not one that is supported by the overwhelming majority of staff within the health board—we've been through this in responses from them. And I don't believe that the structural...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I tried to be polite to the Member in my second answer, to give him an opportunity to reconsider the track he was going down. I have to say that the orders are not just to re-engineer health in north Wales, but your plan—I assume on behalf of your party—to take a wrecking ball to the way we organise and run the national health service in Wales in every single part of the country is not...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: This Government has already taken an approach to promoting social prescribing and to developing the evidence base for its impact on physical and mental health. I've made a series of announcements about a range of projects that we are supporting with additional resource. You may have missed them; I'll happily direct you to them again. In addition to that, you may also want to take a look at...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: As I said in my first answer, I have announced additional funding to support particular social prescribing projects organised by a range of people in the voluntary sector in particular. Part of the challenge about social prescribing is often—these are low-cost or no-cost activities in any event—about encouraging people to make use of them. You may also wish to look at the national...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I'm familiar with the primary care hub that sits within Public Health Wales and their report on social prescribing. There's a challenge, I think, for all of us in the way we talk about healthcare issues in this Chamber and with the wider public. I don't expect the public to become more familiar with the term 'social prescribing' in general terms or understand what it is, because there are a...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Betsi Cadwaladr University Local Health Board (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: In my regular statements on Betsi Cadwaladr university health board, I have set out the detail of where improvements have been made, such as in maternity services, but I have also been very clear where the health board must take urgent action over the next 18 months. In May this year I published a new improvement framework for Betsi and I announced a range of intensive support, including the...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Betsi Cadwaladr University Local Health Board (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I have tremendous sympathy for the family for their loss. I don't want to try and use the position that they find themselves in to either take credit or to score points. I think the important point is that in every incident of this kind there is of course an internal review about what happened and what went wrong. We discussed earlier on another question about the real and lasting impact of...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Betsi Cadwaladr University Local Health Board (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: There was a range of people, of course, who were involved in conversations and campaigns at the time, and the Government did look again and have a review, and the First Minister made a choice on the back of an expert review, which has now led to the SuRNICC being opened. There are people in this Chamber who took part in that campaign, and I see the local Member looking at me, and of course...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Medicines Transcribing and E-discharge (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: Yes. Five health boards have the medicines transcribing and e-discharge system live within their hospitals. I'll refer to it from now on as the MTeD system; it'll make things easier and quicker. The two remaining health boards have their own local systems with similar functionality to MTeD in providing discharge information to general practitioners.

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Medicines Transcribing and E-discharge (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I think it would be foolish to try and pause MTeD and try to do something different. If you look at what we've done, it's part of the Welsh clinical portal. Practitioners generally are very supportive of it and positive about it—not just practitioners within hospitals and GPs but also within the pharmacy world too—and there's recognition that we are in a better position than England,...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Recruitment Challenges in the Welsh NHS (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: We continue to work with health boards and, from October of course, Health Education and Improvement Wales on recruitment challenges with short, medium and long-term action. This includes our successful 'Train. Work. Live.' campaign, increasing medical school places and working to ensure that more Welsh students go on to study to become healthcare professionals. 

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Recruitment Challenges in the Welsh NHS (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: Well, in north Wales, I'm aware of ongoing conversations about having to improve the quality of their accommodation and whether or not the health service itself needs to provide it. Or there could be a partnership, for example, with registered social landlords, housing associations to help provide investment into a facility and better and more proactive management of it. So, it is an issue...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Recruitment Challenges in the Welsh NHS (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I'm happy that you've highlighted the nurse recruitment part of ‘Train. Work. Live.’ and that it isn't just a campaign for GP or specialist doctor recruitment. Actually, the feedback we've already had from people who have come in to Wales as a result of ‘Train. Work. Live.’—a number of whom I met at the Royal College of Nursing congress in Belfast—is that the campaign is...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Recruitment Challenges in the Welsh NHS (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I recognise the point you make about the bursary, so I've made annual choices to roll forward the bursary. The consultation has now ended. We've had, I think, over 40 different organisations and a number individuals who have responded. So, I'll get a summary of the consultation and I'll then have some decisions to make over the autumn about a longer term arrangement so we don't need to make...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: The Promotion of Physical Health Among Young People (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: We deliver a number of approaches to support physical health. We have targeted programmes such as the daily mile, legislation through delivery of an obesity strategy and minimum unit pricing, service provision such as smoking cessation and weight management, guidelines through nutritional standards in schools and planning through health impact assessments. 

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: The Promotion of Physical Health Among Young People (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I recognise the broad points you make and I don't think we'll find ourselves with any disagreement on the principles. I look forward to the committee's report, and you'll hear more from the Government over the course of this autumn. You know that we're committed, not just by legislation, but we've made public commitments about our new healthy weight strategy, available for consultation this...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: The Promotion of Physical Health Among Young People (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: I know that your previous profession was in the secondary education tier, but actually, when you look at what we, in particular, are trying to do, patterns for life are often set in early years and in primary school, and there's lots of outdoor education in almost all the primary schools that I have seen and visited. It's a consistent part of what they look to achieve. And not only that, but...

2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Services: Bone Marrow Donors (19 Sep 2018)

Vaughan Gething: Thank you for the question. The Welsh bone marrow donor registry is operated by the Welsh Blood Service. The Welsh Blood Service actively encourages donors from all ethnic backgrounds to join the panel and asks blood donors aged 17 to 30 if they would like to register, as this age group offers transplant patients the best chance of survival.


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