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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 18 January 2017

18 Jan 2017 · S5 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Health

I will come to that.

Out in the garden at the nursery of my youngest, the children had their own vegetable patch in which they planted, tended and grew their own vegetables. They would harvest them and bring them in to the cook, who served them up for dinner. Guess what vegetables my daughter now eats?

By the time that children get to primary school, they have the basic movement patterns to move on to active games. Kids need to be active every day. One key element that I would like the Parliament to explore is how we can enable our children to safely cycle, walk, skateboard and scoot to school. Being active pre-class has a positive impact on attention, behaviour, learning capacity and, ultimately, attainment. Consider this: reading and writing are physical activities. If that physical literacy path is followed when our children reach secondary school age, activity should be the norm, and they should have a choice in what activities and sports they are most likely to participate in.

Closing the health inequality gap means ensuring that activity is accessible to all. Currently, too many children have to go home first and then go somewhere else, yet the facilities are at school. That is the point at which we can make the biggest impact on health inequality and eliminate barriers to inclusion: create a policy that means that schools remain open after school hours for activities and sport, and make it easy to be active.

Sport and diet have a symbiotic relationship. When a person is active, they are much more likely to have better eating habits. If we look at preventable cancers, we see that smoking, obesity, a lack of fruit and vegetables, and drinking alcohol are major contributors to an increased cancer risk. If a person participates in sport, the likelihood is that they will not smoke, their weight will be under control, they will drink less alcohol, and their diet will be healthier. Sport is a key driver.

A major delivery mechanism for activity resides in the third sector, where volunteers at clubs and organisations engage with communities daily. That gives opportunities for inclusivity and activity. Tackling health inequality should involve recognising and investing more in the volunteer sector.

I point out that the badge that I am wearing was made for me last Monday by the 21st Ayrshire cubs. I promised them that I would wear it and give those boys and girls a name check.

Yesterday, I attended the sports policy conference, at which I heard the Minister for Public Health and Sport talk about the high importance that the Scottish Government places on sport, the positive impact that sport has on the health and wellbeing of the nation, and the need to quicken the pace of improvement. That is all very laudable. However, at a time when the sports spend is 0.1 per cent of the Scottish Government’s budget, how can she and her Government reconcile those words with the proposed £4 million slashing of the sports budget, the withdrawing of funds from jogscotland, which has 40,000 weekly participants, 80 per cent of whom are women and 70 per cent of whom are from inactive backgrounds—I am talking about a £100,000 investment, which equates to £2.50 per person per year—or the withdrawing of funding that allowed every primary school child free swimming lessons? Some 15,000 children now go to secondary school unable to swim. Apart from anything else, that is inherently dangerous.

The actions just do not match the rhetoric. That is just not good enough, and it is time to step up and take preventable health problems seriously.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame) SNP
I will move on to the next debate swiftly because we have practically no time in hand; it is on motion S5M-03440, in the name of Brian Whittle, on health. I ...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
I am pleased to open this debate on the preventable health problems agenda, following on from the recent launch of the Scottish Conservatives’ consultation d...
Gil Paterson (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP) SNP
What you just quoted is in relation to Tory austerity.
Brian Whittle Con
I will treat that with the disdain that it deserves. Interruption Thank you. One of the key preventable conditions is poor mental health. However, I keep hea...
Neil Findlay (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
If we listen to public health experts across Scotland, the first thing that they will say to do to address health inequality is to address income inequality....
Brian Whittle Con
I will come to that. Out in the garden at the nursery of my youngest, the children had their own vegetable patch in which they planted, tended and grew thei...
The Minister for Public Health and Sport (Aileen Campbell) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Brian Whittle Con
Yes. I have enough time.
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
The minister should be very brief, as the member is in his final minute.
Aileen Campbell SNP
I think that there will probably be agreement across the chamber on much of what Brian Whittle has discussed and articulated and on prevention, but I still d...
Brian Whittle Con
Food banks are an austerity problem, but people in Scotland are more likely to use food banks than people anywhere else in the UK. The Scottish National Part...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
No, minister—you cannot have another intervention.
Brian Whittle Con
Sport is chronically underfunded in this country, and it is becoming more inaccessible as the basic cost of entry rises. If we continue in that direction, we...
The Minister for Public Health and Sport (Aileen Campbell) SNP
The challenges that the motion points to are familiar to us all. We have an ageing population, our country is one in which people continue to have an unhealt...
Brian Whittle Con
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Aileen Campbell SNP
Thank you for the promotion.
Brian Whittle Con
We are talking about health inequality, and the Parliament has rightly done some fantastic work on smoking cessation, but will the minister recognise that 9 ...
Aileen Campbell SNP
We have travelled a great distance on tobacco, and action has been taken across a number of Administrations, which has been supported by many different parti...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
I call Colin Smyth to speak to and move amendment S5M-03440.1. You have five minutes. 16:37
Colin Smyth (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I declare an interest as a councillor in Dumfries and Galloway. When Labour created the NHS in 1948, life expectancy in Scotland was 64 years for men and 69...
Aileen Campbell SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
The member is in his last 20 seconds. Mr Smyth, you will have to wind up.
Colin Smyth Lab
This Parliament has the power to make sure that we do not have to make those choices. We have the power to be progressive, and to say that, if we want decent...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
We are now moving to open debate. There is no spare time. Speeches are of a tight four minutes. 16:43
Jackson Carlaw (Eastwood) (Con) Con
It is a pleasure to contribute again to a health debate. I want to make four specific and quite focused observations in relation to the preventative health a...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
You must stop, there, Mr Carlaw.
Jackson Carlaw Con
—but that is how we must proceed. I support the motion in Brian Whittle’s name.
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Thank you very much. 16:47
Clare Haughey (Rutherglen) (SNP) SNP
They say that people’s first step to recovery is their recognising that they have a problem, so I am thankful that the Conservatives have turned their attent...
Neil Findlay (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
Health inequality is Scotland’s greatest national scandal. People are dying in our country years before their time because they are poor and because they do ...