Part of 2. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport – in the Senedd at 2:34 pm on 29 March 2017.
I think we do need to think again, like I said, to take a step back, and think about what we are able to do, and able to do to the right quality and the right state that all of us would expect. I’ve indicated, the figures—I don’t think it’s fair to suggest that there’s been a misdescription of the figures. We’re talking about people referred to an in-patient unit, who have gone to an in-patient mother and baby unit, that we have actually commissioned that care for mothers and their babies. And the challenge over the figures is really about, ‘Is that enough to sustain a unit in Wales?’ as opposed to politicians’ arguments. That’s why I’ve commissioned WHSSC to undertake the review. So, it isn’t about you and me, as party politicians or individual representatives, trying to make a case on the basis of our understanding of figures. I’m actually going to people who run and deliver a service, and will commission that service, to understand if that need is there, and could and should we best meet that need by locating a unit physically within Wales. Because, of course, you’ll know that the distance to, say, a unit in Bristol is a challenge for a number of women in Wales, just as it would be if you lived in St David’s to a unit in Cardiff, if you lived in Ceredigion, or if you lived in Bangor. There’s a challenge here about that physical access to a unit regardless of where that unit is physically based, whether in Wales or outside. And that has to be part of the honest question that we ask ourselves, and that’s why I’ve commissioned the advice as a proper objective basis upon which to make a decision.