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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 15 June 2021

15 Jun 2021 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Women’s Health
Hoy, Craig Con South Scotland Watch on SPTV

Thank you, Deputy Presiding Officer. I welcome you to your place and the minister to her new position.

The consequences of Covid will live with us for a long time to come, and nowhere will those consequences be more severely felt than in our health and social care services. Failure will be measured in lives lost, life-threatening conditions undiagnosed, and mental health problems untreated. The consequences will be acutely felt by patients and their families, but they will also be felt by our front-line health and social care staff. They are more likely to be felt by women. It will be your gran, your mum, your sister, your daughter, your wife, your civil partner, your aunt or your girlfriend who will confront those consequences and those inequalities.

Across Scotland, we are facing an escalating mental health crisis that is made worse by repeated failures by the SNP Government. Women are nearly twice as likely as men to confront the dark cloud of depression. One in five women suffers depression during pregnancy. That is not only adult women. A study by Mindwell concluded that gender differences that can impact girls’ mental health start to emerge at the age of 12.

That is why the sudden and shocking surge in treatment times for child and adolescent mental health services must be urgently addressed by ministers. The campaign group Engender warns that women and girls have faced significant barriers to good mental and physical health for decades and that women are often missed by health services or by public health awareness campaigns. I hope that the Scottish Government’s women’s health plan comes forward with robust interventions.

The shortcomings in relation to social care are also more likely to impact women. In Scotland, twice as many women as men live in long-term care.

The Scottish Conservatives welcome many of the findings of the Feeley review of social care. However, as we explore the creation of a national care service, we must reach beyond the vague but worthy goal of a system that is based on human rights. We must look towards a system that is designed around the needs of the individual, that marries traditional approaches with new technology and that supports home-based care so that more older women can live independently at home and for longer. It should be a system that tackles the staffing and recruitment crisis and fixes the funding formula once and for all.

When we talk about recovery, we need to recognise the impact that Covid has had on staff in social care and in our NHS, the vast majority of whom are women. In fact, 11 per cent of working women in Scotland, compared with just 3 per cent of working men, work in our NHS. When our NHS staff talk of stress and strain, we must remember that it is women who are most likely to be at the front line.

We must do more to close the gender pay gap in our health and social care services. On average, women earn 18.2 per cent less than men in our NHS. That gap is widest in admin functions and personal and social care services.

My colleague Annie Wells rightly set out the areas in which women are being failed in relation to diagnosis and access to primary care. Women’s health problems are too often dismissed, underestimated or simply diagnosed too late. Women who work in our NHS and care services are often stressed out, burnt out, undervalued and underpaid relative to men. We need to recognise those problems, and we in the Parliament need to resolve them. If concerted action today is one of the few silver linings of the Covid pandemic, we must work together to take it.

16:47  

In the same item of business

Stephen Kerr (Central Scotland) (Con) Con
On a point of order, Presiding Officer. Given that we are starting the next item of business 14 minutes later than we thought that we would be, is there any ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
I am grateful for the point of order. Let us see how we get on. We can make an assessment about that later, during the debate. The next item of business i...
The Minister for Public Health, Women’s Health and Sport (Maree Todd) SNP
The Covid-19 pandemic has changed and challenged almost all aspects of life, but its impact has not been felt equally across the population. Women have been ...
Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I welcome the minister to her new post and agree with what she has said so far. Does she agree that, if we are to get the benefit of all those measures, we n...
Maree Todd SNP
It is certainly the case that the challenge does not start only in the doctor’s surgery; it is a societal one. We need to bring about a change and ensure tha...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
On the issue of inequality, will the minister commit to reforming care allowance as soon as possible, to ensure that unpaid carers—who, as I am sure that she...
Maree Todd SNP
Jackie Baillie will be aware that that issue does not fall within my portfolio, but I am well aware of the fact that more women are carers, and that that is ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Thank you for keeping to your time as well as taking interventions, minister. 16:16
Annie Wells (Glasgow) (Con) Con
I am delighted to have the opportunity to speak in the debate. First, I take the opportunity to lend my support to cervical screening awareness week. Cervica...
Carol Mochan (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
It is very welcome that women’s health is receiving some of the spotlight that it deserves in the chamber today. I am delighted to be opening for Scottish La...
Gillian Mackay (Central Scotland) (Green) Green
I take the opportunity to congratulate the minister on her appointment. I look forward to working with her over the coming years. I also thank everyone who s...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Your incorporation of your amendment was elegantly done, Ms Mackay. I call Beatrice Wishart to speak for four minutes, after which we will move to the open ...
Beatrice Wishart (Shetland Islands) (LD) LD
I, too, am grateful for the opportunity to take part in the debate and to help to bring women’s health issues in from the sidelines. Many of us scoffed when...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Thank you, Ms Wishart. I think that all the lodged amendments have now been given an airing. We move to the open debate. The first speaker will be Evelyn Tw...
Evelyn Tweed (Stirling) (SNP) SNP
Thank you, Deputy Presiding Officer, and welcome to your new role. My congratulations go to Maree Todd, too. It is the privilege and honour of my life to be...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Well done, Ms Tweed. I call Craig Hoy. 16:42
Craig Hoy (South Scotland) (Con) Con
Thank you, Deputy Presiding Officer. I welcome you to your place and the minister to her new position. The consequences of Covid will live with us for a lon...
Kenneth Gibson (Cunninghame North) (SNP) SNP
I congratulate my colleague Evelyn Tweed on her excellent first speech in Parliament. Women’s health is important to men, too: we have mothers, daughters, s...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
That is a timely warning to us all. 16:51
Claire Baker (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab) Lab
I very much welcome this debate on women’s health. The creation of a plan that provides a co-ordinated and inclusive strategy for women’s health is overdue, ...
Emma Roddick (Highlands and Islands) (SNP) SNP
In my first speech, I raised the hope that our new Minister for Public Health, Women’s Health and Sport would place importance on improving treatment for end...
Rachael Hamilton (Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire) (Con) Con
Never has there been a more pressing time than the present to debate women’s health issues. After the past 15 months, we have seen waiting times soar, an inc...
The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA
I call Siobhian Brown. This is Ms Brown’s first speech in the chamber. 17:03
Siobhian Brown (Ayr) (SNP) SNP
I thank the minister for leading today’s important debate on women’s health. It is so important that we do not ignore early signs of disease, because early d...
Martin Whitfield (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
It is a true privilege to follow such a powerful first speech from Siobhian Brown. She speaks powerfully of her community, which will do well in her hands, a...
Gillian Mackay Green
I offer my congratulations to Evelyn Tweed and Siobhian Brown on their first speeches. Many colleagues have raised during the debate the importance of women...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
I, too, congratulate Siobhian Brown and Evelyn Tweed on their first speeches in the chamber. I welcome the opportunity to close the debate for Scottish Labou...
Sandesh Gulhane (Glasgow) (Con) Con
I declare an interest, in that I am a practising doctor. Healthcare inequality exists. In fact, it is rife in the health service and in society at large. Th...
Monica Lennon Lab
Will the member take an intervention?
Sandesh Gulhane Con
I will if the Presiding Officer will give me some time back.