UK Parliament / Open data

Summer Adjournment

Proceeding contribution from Jason McCartney (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 17 July 2012. It occurred during Backbench debate on Summer Adjournment.

I thank the Minister. I said earlier that the decision would go to the Secretary of State via the independent panel. I look forward to its going through that process.

The first test for redesigning services is that there should be clear clinical benefit. The health impact assessment was that option G—to keep Leeds open—had fewer negative impacts than the chosen option. The second test is clinician support. There is no evidence that the decision has the support of clinicians; in fact, most have given their support to the Leeds unit.

The third test involves the views of the public. Surely nothing can be clearer than the views of the 600,000 people who signed the petition to keep the Leeds unit open, and the admirable cross-party support for the campaign. The fourth and final test is that there should be support for patient choice. A survey in west and south Yorkshire clearly shows that patients would not travel up to Newcastle.

Many constituents with experience of the Leeds unit have been in touch since the announcement on 4 July.

Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
548 c880 
Session
2012-13
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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