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Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

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Showing 37 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
18 Dec 2008
Organ Donation
This is our third debate on organ donation this year. There can be no doubt that the Parliament—and, indeed, the Government—takes the issue seriously and has given it substantial prominence on the political agenda only two years after it approved the Human Tissue (Scotland) Ac...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
05 Mar 2008
Organ Donation Task Force Report
I am pleased to have been given the opportunity to speak in this debate, which follows on from the previously mentioned and excellent members' business debate that George Foulkes initiated just over a month ago. The contributors to that debate, in well-reasoned and, at times, ...
Mrs Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
30 Nov 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Together with my fellow members of the Health Committee and everyone who gave evidence to us, I welcome the bill and support its general principles, particularly the provision of separate legislation governing organ donation and the retention of organs and tissue at post morte...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
09 Feb 2016
Transplantation (Authorisation of Removal of Organs etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I add my thanks to all the witnesses who gave evidence to the Health and Sport Committee, to the committee clerks for their hard work and support in bringing that evidence together and to the member in charge of the bill for raising the profile of the hugely important issue of...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
24 Jan 2008
Organ Donation
I, too, am very pleased that George Foulkes has secured the debate at a time when the issue of organ donation and transplantation is rapidly moving up the political agenda. As a number of colleagues already know, the issue is of particular interest to me as the mother of a son...
Mrs Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
02 Feb 2006
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill
I, too, thank all those who gave evidence to the Health Committee. I also thank the committee clerks and lawyers who guided me through the plethora of amendments—which arose from one policy intention—in my name at stage 3. The Conservatives welcome this complex and important b...
Nanette Milne Con Chamber
09 Feb 2016
Transplantation (Authorisation of Removal of Organs etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I do not think that I have time—I am sorry. Another contentious aspect of the bill is the role of the authorised investigating person, who is described in the policy memorandum as a health professional whose role would be “to determine whether or not a deceased adult’s orga...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
05 Nov 2014
Imam Hussain Blood Donation Campaign
I, too, thank Jim Eadie for bringing this issue to the chamber this evening. I am sure that I will not be alone in saying that I was unfamiliar with Imam Hussain until I examined his story and the reason why the blood donation campaign was launched in his name in 2006 to incr...
Nanette Milne: Con Chamber
24 Sep 2009
Blood Donation
I accept what Rhoda Grant says, but we clearly see the issue from a different point of view.There are other ways to encourage donation, as we have seen from the success of the transfusion service's new strategy, which has resulted in the recruitment of nearly 70,000 new donors...
Mrs Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
20 Dec 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I will be brief. Amendment 112 seeks to ensure ministers' on-going commitment over time to promote awareness of organ donation and transplantation. The aim is for successive generations of people to become aware of the systems that are in place for organ donation and to be enc...
Mrs Milne: Con Chamber
02 Feb 2006
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill
I was referring to cases in which the deceased has not stated their wishes and they have no close relatives who might know their wishes. The Scottish Council on Human Bioethics certainly interprets what the bill proposes as a soft opt-out system. Some people are considering re...
Mrs Milne: Con Chamber
02 Feb 2006
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I lodged the amendments in the group precisely to deal with the isolated people whom the minister mentioned—people who do not have relatives in this country or close by to whom they have been able to express their wishes, and who feel strongly about not donating their organs. ...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
20 Dec 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I lodged the amendments because of a concern that was expressed to me that section 7 does not ensure that a deceased person's wishes will be honoured if a nearest relative can make a decision to authorise organ donation when the deceased has not, before death, made his or her ...
Nanette Milne: Con Committee
21 Sep 2009
New Petitions
I congratulate Andrew Danet on a very good presentation and a significant petition. There is no doubt that we need an increasing number of blood donors. I have a personal interest in the subject as, in a previous life, I was an anaesthetist and was well aware of the need for b...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
24 Sep 2009
Blood Donation
I am pleased to take part in this debate, and I, too, congratulate Rhoda Grant on bringing the important issue of blood donation to the attention of Parliament.The debate is timely. On Monday this week I was in Rhoda Grant's region, at Alness academy, where—as Rhoda has told u...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
13 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
The bill proposes that an adult can give authorisation for the use of body parts for organ donation and transplantation "in writing" and"verbally in the presence of … witnesses".Although the Law Society of Scotland agrees with that provision, it believes that"where the authori...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
27 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Clearly the issue needs to be examined in more detail.Section 6 allows an adult to give verbal authorisation for organ donation in the event of their death; however, withdrawal of verbal authorisation must be provided in writing. I believe that Dr Junor argued that the bill sh...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
27 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
My impression was that the bill does not stipulate that authorisation can be done either by carrying a donor card or by electronic registration. A previous panel expressed concern about where authorisation is actually held. There would be concern if it was to be found in someo...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
25 Oct 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
We spoke about withdrawal of consent. However, we did not discuss whether there should be a central register of people who are willing to offer their body for post-mortem examination. We dealt with the matter when we discussed organ donation but not with regard to post mortem....
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
20 Dec 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
I appreciate what the minister says. I do not want to make organ donation more difficult, but a concern was raised with me about challenges to such authorisation under the ECHR. Nevertheless, I will not press amendment 122.
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
12 May 2015
Palliative and End-of-life Care
I very much welcome the opportunity to discuss palliative and end-of-life care. I particularly welcome Marie Curie’s latest report, on changing the conversation on terminal illness, together with the important research on access to palliative care that has been carried out on ...
Nanette Milne Con Committee
17 Nov 2015
Transplantation (Authorisation of Removal of Organs etc) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I seek clarification about the appointment of proxies. When we met the donor families, they seemed concerned that the provision would complicate the system and could possibly delay organ donation, to the extent that organs that would have been useful may no longer be useful. I...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
15 Apr 2008
New Petitions
As a former blood donor whose blood is no longer accepted because of the medication that I have been on in recent years, I can understand where you are coming from. However, with my medical hat on, I note that the list of people who are turned down for blood donation is extrem...
Mrs Milne: Con Chamber
02 Feb 2006
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
I will speak principally to amendments 15 and 17, because the others are all consequential on amendment 15. If the amendments appear to be somewhat complicated, that is because they reflect the complexity of the bill.The amendments would enable a person to register opposition ...
Mrs Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Committee
13 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I have a few questions on authorisation, which arise from Dr Robertson's submission for NHS Grampian. In relation to situations in which a donor has donated a specific organ, there is an issue about whether family members would be able to give permission for other organs to be...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
27 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
Is the issue for you who does it? I was registered electronically as an organ donor, but I was there when it was done. I filled in a form.
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
17 Jan 2006
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
It is important that we should know what we are talking about when we are talking about tissue and organs. The fact that the amendments tie the bill into the Human Tissue Act 2004 and the Human Organ Transplants Act 1989 should make the definitions clear across the United King...
Mrs Milne: Con Chamber
25 Jan 2006
Abolition of NHS Prescription Charges (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
No, not at the moment.For example, there are people with asthma, HIV/AIDS, cancer or Parkinson's disease, people who require immunosuppressive therapy following organ transplantation, and many others who are on long-term medication that was not available in 1968.Prescriptions ...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
18 Sep 2013
Palliative Care
I am very pleased to have been given the opportunity to lead a parliamentary debate on the report “How good is primary care at identifying patients who need palliative care?” just nine days after its publication in the European Journal of Palliative Care. I thank all the MSPs ...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
19 Nov 2014
Portfolio Question Time · Organ Donation
The minister has told us about recent increases in the number of organ donors. Is that part of the impact of the Human Tissue (Scotland) Act 2006, which the Parliament passed eight years ago? How does Scotland compare with countries such as Spain and Holland, which have had a ...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
24 Feb 2015
Eating Disorders Awareness Week 2015
I apologise to members, as I shall have to leave before the end of the debate because of other commitments. For the same reason, I will be unable to attend the eating disorders seminar this evening. I, too, add my congratulations to Dennis Robertson on once again bringing th...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
13 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
I apologise if this has been raised, convener. Could Professor Busuttil clarify the Law Society's submission in connection with those provisions in the bill concerning live donation?
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
27 Sep 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
That does appear inconsistent.The bill also allows a relative's authorisation to be withdrawn. We discussed with a previous panel of witnesses the suggestion that the bill should set out how long before transplantation such authorisation can be withdrawn. What is your view on ...
Mrs Milne: Con Committee
20 Dec 2005
Human Tissue (Scotland) Bill: Stage 2
The purpose of my amendments is to give adults with incapacity the same legal protection as children have with regard to the live donation of non-regenerative material. In view of the amendments that the minister has lodged, which essentially cover what my amendments would do,...
Nanette Milne: Con Committee
04 Nov 2008
Current Petitions
I have huge sympathy with the SNBTS. The crucial point is that, necessary though transfusion and donation are, transfusion must be made as safe as is humanly possible. We know that all sorts of people cannot give blood or are not allowed to give blood. For example, if someone ...
Mrs Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con Chamber
01 Apr 2004
Justice and Law Officers · Blood Donation
The minister will be aware that I have lodged a motion encouraging the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body to make facilities available for MSPs and parliamentary staff to donate blood. To date, the motion has been supported by 34 members, which is a substantial number altho...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con) Con Chamber
20 Jan 2011
Interests of Members of the Scottish Parliament Act 2006 and Code of Conduct
My contribution to the debate will be brief and fairly general.We have heard from the committee convener the detail of why we thought it appropriate to carry out an inquiry to look at the schedule to the 2006 act, which defines the categories of registrable interest, and secti...
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Chamber

Plenary, 18 Dec 2008

18 Dec 2008 · S3 · Plenary
Item of business
Organ Donation
Milne, Nanette Con North East Scotland Watch on SPTV
This is our third debate on organ donation this year. There can be no doubt that the Parliament—and, indeed, the Government—takes the issue seriously and has given it substantial prominence on the political agenda only two years after it approved the Human Tissue (Scotland) Act 2006, some provisions of which were designed to enhance the rate of donation.

During our debates, we have heard some well-reasoned and, sometimes, emotional speeches, which have put on record the cogent arguments for and against a system of so-called presumed consent to organ donation. The debate continues, and both of this year's excellent reports by the organ donation task force make it clear that there is no simple way to achieve an increase in organ donation. However, it is beyond dispute that there is an urgent need for more organs if we are to get anywhere near meeting the needs of the many people who await transplantation.

There also seems to be little doubt that, as Richard Simpson said, the number of people with end-stage organ disease will increase as our population ages and individuals suffer the long-term effects of the diabetes, obesity and excessive alcohol consumption that are prevalent in Scotland today. We must step up our efforts to alter lifestyles as a means of avoiding those diseases in the first place but, of course, the culture change will not happen overnight. Research must also continue into finding a cure for the many chronic conditions that lead, eventually, to organ failure and into the practicalities of viable organ generation within the laboratory.

In the meantime, transplantation is the only hope of saving the lives of many people whose organs can no longer perform their vital function, so we must consider every possible means of increasing the rate of organ donation and giving hope to those who are going through the pain and trauma of end-stage organ disease. Members should believe me that it is traumatic and deeply distressing to watch close friends or family members suffer the extreme breathlessness of respiratory or heart failure, or the severe pain of procedures such as sclerotherapy for the oesophageal varices that result from a failing liver.

I welcome the organ donation task force's latest report, which follows on from the one that we debated in March. The reports make it clear that the current system of organ donation is failing to meet the increasing demands that are placed upon it and that everything possible must be done to increase donation rates in the United Kingdom now within the existing legislation, which provides for opting in to donation. Initially, I was not clear about the intention of Richard Simpson's amendment but, having heard his explanation of it, I am inclined to agree with it, although the five years that the task force proposes seems a reasonable timescale for proper assessment of the efficacy of its proposals.

The factors that influence the rate of organ donation have been well rehearsed in our previous debates and the task force reports, and I have little to add. There is no doubt that there are many more people in Scotland who are willing to donate their organs than are on the donor register, and that it is largely inertia that stops them registering. As I have said in the Parliament before, it took me more than 10 years from my son's transplant to register myself, and I am not altogether sure that my husband and daughter are even on the register, although I know that both would want me to consent on their behalf should the situation ever arise.

Every opportunity to make organ donation easy should be taken up. Efforts should also be made to encourage people to think about what happens to their organs after death and to discuss the matter with their families. Unfortunately, in our society today, there seems to be a reluctance to acknowledge that death is an inevitable part of life, and it is seldom talked about in any depth. Our newspapers and other media are full of the fatal accidents that occur daily on our roads, but we do not often hear about the victims' contributions to saving the lives of others by the transplantation of their organs to which their bereaved families generously agree.

I agree with the BMA's assertion that improving organ donation infrastructure and increasing donor numbers are interdependent measures. To that end, we must somehow change our culture and create an environment in which donation becomes the normal choice. The task force has stressed the need to improve donor identification and referral and to enhance donor co-ordination and organ retrieval. The success of such efforts will depend on all parts of the NHS embracing organ donation as a usual, rather than an unusual, event.

The recommendations to improve organ donation infrastructure and to remove the barriers to donation should, if implemented across the country, go a long way towards achieving the UK target of almost doubling the rate of donation by 2013, without the need to resort to further legislative change. If the proposed infrastructure changes that the Government is addressing, which the cabinet secretary spelled out earlier, achieve the desired result, well and good, but if they do not, changing to an opt-out system with appropriate safeguards, which appears to be supported by more than 60 per cent of the population, will have to be considered again. I therefore very much welcome the task force's recommendation to review the situation in five years' time in the light of the progress that is made on implementing the recommendations.

I hope that between now and 2013, satisfactory progress will be made and sufficient organs will become available for the many people who currently await them or who may require them in the future. Any one of us or our friends and family members could find themselves in need of organ replacement. I believe that we are morally obliged to do the utmost to increase donor numbers, even if we ultimately have to move to an opt-out position.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Trish Godman): Lab
The next item of business is a debate on motion S3M-3124, in the name of Nicola Sturgeon, on the organ donation task force.
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing (Nicola Sturgeon): SNP
Members will remember the good debate that we had back in March, after the organ donation task force published its first report, "Organs for Transplant". In ...
George Foulkes (Lothians) (Lab): Lab
I appreciate everything that the cabinet secretary has said. Does what she has just said in her last few sentences mean that she will accept Richard Simpson'...
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
No, I am not minded to accept it, although I will listen to the debate. It is important that we accept as a starting point the task force report's recommenda...
Mike Rumbles (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine) (LD): LD
It is obvious from the evidence that was heard by the Health Committee in the previous parliamentary session and from the evidence that was taken by the task...
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
If the member will bear with me, I will go on to talk about the specific issues that we have to deal with.Our big advantage in Scotland is that we know that ...
Dr Richard Simpson (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab): Lab
I welcome the opportunity to have another debate on organ transplantation—our most recent debate on the topic was in March—in the light of the publication of...
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
I hope that I have explained that we should not consider ourselves as being tied. I should point out that, taken literally, Dr Simpson's amendment removes an...
Dr Simpson: Lab
I know that we have all been very busy over the past week, but it would have been better if we had been able to sit down and work out a common approach. I do...
Christine Grahame (South of Scotland) (SNP): SNP
There is no whip on this vote and I remain very open minded on this issue. However, I respectfully suggest to Richard Simpson that, given the cabinet secreta...
Dr Simpson: Lab
The cabinet secretary has put her personal views on the record, but she might not always be in that post.Labour members, too, will have a free vote in this d...
Jamie Stone (Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross) (LD): LD
Go on to page 3.
Dr Simpson: Lab
You are quite right—I will just tear that page out.In its 2000 report, the Health and Community Care Committee highlighted a number of ways of extending orga...
Mike Rumbles: LD
But surely even the use of the term "presumed consent" is terribly patronising.
Dr Simpson: Lab
It would be excellent if we could come up with an alternative term—some people have been talking about an opt-out system.Out of the 27 European Union countri...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con): Con
I welcome the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing's speech and her confirmation that she will review progress in the next one or two years. That will ...
Nicola Sturgeon: SNP
I agree with Mary Scanlon. I ask her to acknowledge that that is why we have set a target to double not the number of people on the register but the rate of ...
Mary Scanlon: Con
I will come to that. If we are to be successful, we need two measurements—not just the number of people who are willing to donate, but the number of successf...
Ross Finnie (West of Scotland) (LD): LD
I share with everyone in the chamber a commitment to increase the number of registered organ donors. The issue is complex and I welcome all the work carried ...
Christine Grahame (South of Scotland) (SNP): SNP
I, like others, welcome the cabinet secretary's announcement of £5 million over three years for various measures to increase organ donation and intervention,...
George Foulkes (Lothians) (Lab): Lab
I, too, welcome the debate, although I have one reservation to which I shall return later. I apologise for having to leave for part of the debate, due to an ...
Mike Rumbles: LD
George Foulkes keeps mentioning Spain. Does he accept that we took evidence from Spain on the matter in the previous session, that the task force took eviden...
George Foulkes: Lab
Mike Rumbles is entirely wrong. It is the combination of the structure and the opt-out system that is important. Everyone to whom I have spoken says that.The...
Christine Grahame: SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
George Foulkes: Lab
No. I am running out of time.In order to increase organ donor numbers by 50 per cent, the Scottish Government must provide the necessary funding and resource...
Ian McKee (Lothians) (SNP): SNP
Members will be aware that the first recorded organ donation took place some time ago, when Adam parted with one of his ribs in order that woman could be cre...
Nanette Milne (North East Scotland) (Con): Con
This is our third debate on organ donation this year. There can be no doubt that the Parliament—and, indeed, the Government—takes the issue seriously and has...
Helen Eadie (Dunfermline East) (Lab): Lab
Thank you, Presiding Officer, for the opportunity to contribute to the debate. We all think of giving in this Christmas season and of wrapping our Christmas ...
Michael Matheson (Falkirk West) (SNP): SNP
The nature of this debate is somewhat different from our March 2008 debate, which became rather polarised around the positions of either having an opt-out sy...
Mike Rumbles (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine) (LD): LD
Everyone in the debate wants an increase in organ donations, as Michael Matheson said, to save lives and to ensure that people who are in need have a much be...