Meeting of the Parliament 13 March 2025
There is an instinctive risk aversion about rapid prototyping and adoption, which the member rightly highlights. There could be greater achievements in that respect.
Mr Gulhane referenced the quadruple helix. He said that the key component—in addition to academia, Government and industry—is public and civic society buy-in. That was tested adequately, effectively and promisingly during the pandemic, during which we saw rapid introductions of NHS clinical interfaces that were readily accepted and adopted by the public. Who would have thought, mere months before the pandemic struck, that we would be engaging in such a national effort and unified purpose to improve national outcomes? I think back to the big public health initiatives such as the 1957 tuberculosis eradication campaign in Glasgow, during which the whole city got together to try to eradicate tuberculosis through mass X-ray campaigns. We could mobilise the population behind the agenda in a more effective way, and I encourage the health secretary to look at opportunities to do that.