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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 12 November 2024

12 Nov 2024 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Women’s Health Plan 2021 to 2024

Over the years, I have raised concerns about a range of women’s health issues, from endometriosis and pre-eclampsia to cardiovascular conditions and breast cancer. Those important female health issues have long required further action, and I welcome the opportunity to discuss them in the context of the women’s health plan.

The plan is undoubtedly a step in the right direction, but I believe that there are still significant gaps to be addressed. I will focus on four key areas that should be central to ensuring that women’s health is properly prioritised and supported. First, I will focus on endometriosis, which several members have mentioned. Seven years ago, I led a members’ business debate that ultimately resulted in significant progress, with the involvement and solid support of the then Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care, Jeane Freeman, and the then Minister for Public Health and Sport, Aileen Campbell, securing the opening in Glasgow of a third accredited endometriosis unit to complement those in Edinburgh and Aberdeen.

Although the women’s health plan outlines positive aims through the endometriosis pathway, including improved access to specialist endometriosis centres and reducing diagnosis time, I believe that those actions fall far short of what is needed. In Scotland, it still takes an average of eight and a half years from the onset of symptoms to receive a diagnosis of endometriosis. That is simply not good enough to meet the needs of the more than 100,000 women who live with that debilitating condition.

To truly prioritise women’s health, we need more specialist treatment centres. In Ayrshire, for example, we must reduce the burden of long travel times and journeys and make it easier for families and support networks to be involved in care, expanding access to that care closer to home. The added stress of long journeys only serves to make treatment more difficult. That is important not just to improving healthcare access, but to improving lives.

My second point concerns cardiovascular disease, which remains a leading cause of death among women in Scotland, where 95,000 women currently live with coronary heart disease. The condition significantly impacts quality of life and claims the lives of twice as many women as breast cancer. Thanks to British Heart Foundation research, sex-related differences in presentation and management of heart disease are now much better understood. However, women continue to face significant challenges, such as misdiagnosis, receiving fewer treatments and being underrepresented in clinical trials, which, in many cases, contribute to sub-optimal care that is not tailored to their needs.

Although there has been a 14 per cent reduction in coronary heart disease deaths over the past decade, recent trends show an increase, highlighting the need for sustained and focused action. It is alarming that heart disease accounts for a quarter of maternal deaths in the UK, with 77 per cent of the women who died not knowing that they had a cardiac condition. That underlines a critical failure in our health service to identify, let alone effectively manage, heart disease in women.

However, I am encouraged by the progress that has been made through the women’s health plan, which takes an important step forward in addressing those challenges. The plan’s focus on increasing research funding and recognition of gender-specific health needs, particularly in cardiovascular care, is welcome and much needed. We must build on that momentum and continue to raise awareness of women’s heart health across Scotland, ensuring that women receive vital heart health advice and support at every stage of their lives, with health service interaction at every available opportunity.

Recognition of the need for high-blood-pressure management is vital, as hypertension is a key risk factor for cardiovascular disease, which is responsible for around half of heart attacks and strokes. Clinicians, particularly obstetricians and midwives, must be equipped with the necessary knowledge and resources to offer advice and support to women who are at risk. By prioritising women’s heart health, investing in early diagnosis and developing tailored treatments, we have a real opportunity to improve outcomes.

Pre-eclampsia affects around 5,000 pregnancies in Scotland each year, but it is noticeably absent from the women’s health plan, despite being in the original 2021-24 plan. Perhaps the minister can tell us why it is absent. That life-threatening condition is serious and requires immediate attention, but it remains overlooked in a strategy that is meant to address women’s health needs.

However, I am pleased to note that NHS Lothian has taken a positive step forward by introducing targeted blood tests to reduce the risk for pregnant women. The placental growth factor test, which NHS England has used since 2016, is a significant development in helping doctors to diagnose pre-eclampsia. The test not only helps to reduce the number of unnecessary hospital admissions but, more importantly, ensures that expectant mothers receive the care and support that they need. A roll-out is taking place, but it is slower than it should be. Given the severity of the condition, which is manageable with early detection, I ask the minister, as I have asked her predecessors, when PIGF testing will take place routinely across all health board areas in Scotland, which will ensure that every pregnant woman has access to that vital test.

My son died on his due date. My wife’s liver ruptured, and she then spent 19 days in an intensive care and high-dependency unit because of a failure by midwives and doctors to diagnose pre-eclampsia.

After the event, women who suffered from pre-eclampsia are twice as likely to have heart attacks and strokes as women who did not, but there appears to be no follow-up whatsoever, which is a matter that I have raised previously with the minister. Instead, there is a suggestion that such women—lay members of the public—self-monitor their blood pressure for the rest of their lives. Even the women’s health champion, Professor Anna Glasier, who is in the public gallery, calls that a rather “tall order” in the health plan.

Finally, I turn to primary biliary cholangitis, which is a chronic liver disease that many women across Scotland are living with. Following a round-table meeting at the Scottish Parliament, which Gillian Mackay kindly chaired, a recent report highlighted significant disparities in the experiences of women living with liver conditions. The findings revealed that experiences vary widely, depending on geography, with many women reporting feelings of stigma associated with their liver condition, despite it not being caused by any action of their own, such as alcohol consumption.

The report recommends wider roll-out of the intelligent liver function test, which is currently used routinely to assess liver health in Tayside and Fife. Research by the University of Dundee shows that the test increases diagnosis of liver disease by 43 per cent, which allows for earlier and more effective treatment. Expanding access to the test would improve early diagnosis and care for women living with liver conditions across Scotland. Scottish ministers should also actively raise awareness of PBC.

The women’s health plan provides us with a clear path forward, but much remains to be done. By continuing to build on progress, we can ensure that women across Scotland receive the care and support that they deserve when they need it most.

16:02  

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-15382, in the name of Jenni Minto, on progress and next steps on the women’s health plan 2021 to 2024. 1...
The Minister for Public Health and Women’s Health (Jenni Minto) SNP
I am extremely passionate about women’s health, so I warmly welcome this debate and the opportunity to bring this important topic back to the chamber. We kn...
Rachael Hamilton (Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire) (Con) Con
The minister met me and endometriosis campaigners last April. She looked at a policy paper from the Scottish Conservatives regarding ways to improve access t...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I will give you the time back, minister.
Jenni Minto SNP
I thank Rachael Hamilton for her work, specifically in the Borders, on endometriosis diagnosis times. I recognise that diagnosis times for endometriosis are ...
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab) Lab
It is clear to say that, when it comes to specialist neonatal services, the consultants, all the clinicians and the women who are involved are opposed to the...
Jenni Minto SNP
We have received advice from clinical experts in the field, and they, as well as the charity Bliss, which advocates for parents, all support the reduction in...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I invite Annie Wells to speak to and move amendment S6M-15382.1. 15:09
Annie Wells (Glasgow) (Con) Con
I begin by thanking the many organisations that have provided briefings for the debate. Health is one of the biggest issues in the minds of people across our...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I call Carol Mochan to speak to and move amendment S6M-15382.2. 15:17
Carol Mochan (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I am so pleased that Government time has been given to debating women’s health today. We will support the Government’s motion tonight. If we have learned an...
Tess White (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
Does Carol Mochan agree that there needs to be a separate road map for women and that the women’s health plan needs to be sex specific?
Carol Mochan Lab
Yes, of course. I return to my point about unhealthy life expectancy. Not only do our poorest neighbours die younger, they live life in a much poorer state ...
Gillian Mackay (Central Scotland) (Green) Green
The women’s health plan that was launched in 2021 marked a significant commitment to addressing the distinct health needs of women across Scotland and aimed ...
Tess White Con
I would like to ask you whether you—
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
Through the chair, please, Ms White.
Tess White Con
Sorry. Does the member agree that we benefited from working collaboratively in the work that we did as a committee on the buffer zones?
Gillian Mackay Green
Absolutely. It very much helps us all if we work collaboratively in the sphere of women’s health. I hope that we will have a similar level of conversation in...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
It gives me pleasure to speak for the Liberal Democrats in what is a vital debate. I am grateful to Jenny Minto for securing Government time to bring the deb...
Tess White Con
Alex Cole-Hamilton referenced the US in relation to abortion, but will he also applaud the fact that, even though Donald Trump is a controversial figure, he ...
Alex Cole-Hamilton LD
I very much regret that Tess White wants to lower the tone of what has so far been a consensual debate. That problem stems from her, and I ask her to reflect...
The Deputy Presiding Officer LD
I note that a member who was looking to participate in the debate has not been here throughout the opening speeches, for which I will need an explanation and...
Emma Roddick (Highlands and Islands) (SNP) SNP
I was glad to hear, in the minister’s opening speech, about the progress that has been made on endometriosis and, in particular, on managing the pain that co...
Tess White (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
As the first women’s health plan comes to an end, I welcome the opportunity to take stock. I thank Jenni Minto and her team for the cross-party working that ...
Kenneth Gibson (Cunninghame North) (SNP) SNP
Over the years, I have raised concerns about a range of women’s health issues, from endometriosis and pre-eclampsia to cardiovascular conditions and breast c...
Pam Duncan-Glancy (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
I thank the Government for bringing forward this debate on such an important issue. Although I welcome the fact that some progress has been made on the women...
Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP) SNP
I am pleased to contribute to what has been an informative and excellent debate. I will begin by following on from Pam Duncan-Glancy’s thoughtful contributio...
Audrey Nicoll (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP) SNP
Like my colleagues, I am pleased that we are taking time to debate the subject of women’s health. It is an issue that regularly appears in my constituency po...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
We now move to closing speeches. I call Gillian Mackay to close on behalf of the Scottish Greens. 16:21
Gillian Mackay Green
This has been an interesting debate and I will reflect on some of the contributions. In her opening statement, the minister laid out how important it is to l...