<p>Questions Without Notice from Party Spokespeople</p>

Part of 3. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport – in the Senedd at 2:36 pm on 21 June 2017.

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Photo of Vaughan Gething Vaughan Gething Labour 2:36, 21 June 2017

I thank you for your further follow-up question. I’ve been clear and consistent about the question of a medical school in north Wales. I’m awaiting final advice, and when that advice comes in, I’ll make a decision. I’ll also need to have a conversation with my Cabinet colleague the Cabinet Secretary for Education, because the budget isn’t in one particular area of Government; it’s spread across budget pressures for both of us—whether that is a new medical school, or whether it is expanding the numbers of doctors we want to train and recruit here in Wales. So, there’s honesty and, I think, consistency in the questions that you and other colleagues have asked again, and I don’t have any difficulty with you asking the question.

When I get the advice, I’ll be clear about what the advice is, I’ll be clear about what the Government response is and what we then expect to do. But I do recognise that there is a clear aspiration for more people to undertake their medical training in different parts of Wales. And, of course, rural Wales isn’t just an issue for north Wales. There are other points and questions as well about how we keep people in Wales—whether it’s west Wales or north Wales—who want to train to become a doctor, but also about how we get people to come back into the system. If you’re 18 or 19 and you live on the Isle of Anglesey, you may well want to go to London or Liverpool or somewhere else to do your training. But we need to be better at getting people to come back into our system. So, it’s more than one thing, and I don’t want to try and pretend that a medical school is the only answer or the answer to resolving some of those challenges. We see work on this already, for example, in the curriculum programme that Cardiff University are developing, where they recognise that there’s more they could do about the speciality of rural medicine that will be attractive to some people who want to become doctors now and in the future. There’s lots of different work ongoing, and when there is advice and a response from myself, then I’ll sit down and agree and discuss that with my colleague Kirsty Williams. We’ll need to cover all of those in pointing out what the response is going to be.