Skip to main content

Language: English / Gàidhlig

Loading…

Seòmar agus comataidhean

Questions and answers

Parliamentary questions can be asked by any MSP to the Scottish Government or the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body. The questions provide a means for MSPs to get factual and statistical information.

  • Written questions must be answered within 10 working days (20 working days during recess)
  • Other questions such as Topical, Portfolio, General and First Minister's Question Times are taken in the Chamber

Urgent Questions aren't included in the Question and Answers search.  There is a SPICe fact sheet listing Urgent and emergency questions.

Find out more about parliamentary questions

Criathragan Hide all filters

Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 5 May 2021
  6. Current session: 12 May 2021 to 1 October 2024
Answer status
Question type

Displaying 3667 questions Show Answers

|

Question reference: S5W-19729

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Thursday, 01 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 20 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government, in light of the commitment in its health and social care delivery plan, what progress it is making with doubling levels of palliative and end of life provision in the community, and how it defines such provision.

Question reference: S5W-19830

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Wednesday, 07 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government whether it will break down the information at Table 10 of the Scottish Public Health Network report, Health Care Needs Assessment of Adult Chronic Pain Services in Scotland, by the number of (a) part- and (b) full-time staff employed in each discipline by each NHS board

Question reference: S5W-19833

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Wednesday, 07 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government what its response is to the comment in the Scottish Public Health Network report, Health Care Needs Assessment of Adult Chronic Pain Services in Scotland, that staffing “was the biggest concern for most boards”.

Question reference: S5W-19790

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Tuesday, 06 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Joe FitzPatrick on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government, in light of the possibility that they might be working with vulnerable patients, what its position is on offering nursing and midwifery students the flu vaccine.

Question reference: S5W-19831

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Wednesday, 07 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government whether it will break down the service provision tables at Appendix 5 of the Scottish Public Health Network report, Health Care Needs Assessment of Adult Chronic Pain Services in Scotland, by the number of (a) part- and (b) full-time staff employed by each NHS board at the (i) self-management, (ii) community and primary care service, (iii) secondary care-based specialist pain management service and (iv) highly specialist level.

Question reference: S5W-19832

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Wednesday, 07 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government whether each NHS board provided the Scottish Public Health Network with staffing figures for chronic pain services to inform its report, Health Care Needs Assessment of Adult Chronic Pain Services in Scotland, and, if so, in light of the comment in the report that staffing “was the biggest concern for most boards”, for what reason the figures were not included.

Question reference: S5W-19829

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Wednesday, 07 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government how many clinical staff for chronic pain services there have been in each of the last five years, broken down by NHS board.

Question reference: S5W-19276

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Monday, 08 October 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government what its response is to concerns regarding the impact on patients of a lack of myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) clinical nurse specialists, and whether it will provide an update on plans to recruit more.

Question reference: S5W-19320

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Tuesday, 09 October 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government what analysis it has carried out of how each NHS board is spending its share of the additional support that has been allocated since 2017 to improve waiting times; what methodology the boards use to inform ministers of how the funding is being used, and what assessment it has made of the effectiveness of each board's use of the money.

Question reference: S5W-19731

  • Asked by: Miles Briggs, MSP for Lothian, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
  • Date lodged: Thursday, 01 November 2018
  • Current Status: Answered by Jeane Freeman on 15 November 2018

To ask the Scottish Government how much it has spent in each of the last five years on specialist palliative care services in each (a) NHS board and (b) health and social care partnership area, also broken down by its expenditure on services provided by the (i) third and (ii) independent sector.