Speeches by Kinnock.
Every Hansard contribution by Stephen Kinnock this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.
Showing 581–600 of 1,085 contributions · most-recent first
| Date | Debate & contribution | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “Clause 11 will introduce a new clinical checklist that the patient’s responsible clinician must follow when making decisions about a patient’s treatment. This seeks to put the patient at the heart of clinical decision making. Specifically, the checklist will require that the clinician supports the patient to engage in …” healthsocial-care | 293 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “I thank the Opposition spokesman. The role and nomination of the responsible clinician are well established and represent current practice, and the clause seeks merely to clarify the current position in legislation in order to avoid confusion regarding the roles of the existing responsible clinician and the community c…” healthsocial-care | 293 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “Under clause 10, a responsible clinician is an “approved clinician”, which refers to a mental health professional, usually a consultant psychiatrist, who is approved by or on behalf of the Secretary of State for the purposes of the Mental Health Act and has statutory roles and responsibilities. The responsible clinicia…” healthsocial-care | 231 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “In many ways, that is a question for clinicians, because they always have to make judgments in individual cases. In tragic cases such as eating disorders, at times it gets to the point where a person cannot be saved. If a patient is refusing to eat, it is notoriously challenging for clinicians to try to get that positi…” healthsocial-care | 460 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “I was intending to come to the questions that the hon. Gentleman and others asked, but as he has asked that now, I can tell him that the revised detention criteria and definition of appropriate medical treatment do not exclude patients with uncertain treatment outcomes, as long as they have a psychiatric disorder. Trea…” healthsocial-care | 261 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “I will start by commenting on amendment 12, which was tabled by the hon. Member for Winchester. We do not consider the amendment necessary, as section 13(2) of the Mental Health Act 1983 already requires an “approved mental health professional” to consider all the “circumstances of the case” before making an applicatio…” healthsocial-care | 660 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “The numbers that I gave the hon. Gentleman earlier were things that had happened, rather than gazing into the future and reading the tea leaves, but I will do as he asks, and I will ask officials to take him up on the point about the capacity of the legal and judicial system, in particular the tribunals. On the questio…” healthsocial-care | 257 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “It is a little bit dangerous for us to get into a numbers game, because I do not think it is particularly useful or productive to say, “As a result of the changes that we are making, we think it will decrease by x number or increase by y number”, because, by definition, we do not have a crystal ball and we cannot be su…” healthsocial-care | 164 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “Clause 7 will amend the grounds for discharge by the tribunal to align with the revised grounds for detention set out in clause 5. The tribunal must consider whether the patient continues to meet the criteria when deciding whether to discharge a patient. These changes will provide decision-makers with a clear and consi…” healthsocial-care | 151 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “We have piloted culturally appropriate advocacy models, which ran up to March 2025. An evaluation of the pilot will be published in the summer, and that will feed into the evidence base for the impact and deliverability of culturally appropriate advocacy at local level. We will use the learnings from our culturally app…” healthsocial-care | 345 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “My hon. Friend is absolutely right, and we could go into the question he has just raised in a profound way, because the social determinants of ill health are such an important part of the picture. Many people in our communities are dealing with all sorts of incredibly challenging and traumatic issues in their lives, of…” healthsocial-care | 171 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “My hon. Friend raises a very valid point that, as he says, we will come on to in greater detail. Right across our health service, in every aspect, early intervention is always better than trying to pick up the pieces after a crisis. That is the same for both physical and mental health. We believe that the advance choic…” healthsocial-care | 137 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “I pay tribute to my hon. Friend for her expertise and am pleased to hear that she feels reassured by my remarks. It is absolutely the Government’s ambition to bring more consistency and clarity to this area. A number of hon. Members have raised issues around racial disparities; I plan to come on to that. That is a spec…” healthsocial-care | 361 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Fourth sitting) “It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Vickers. I turn to amendment 11, tabled by the hon. Member for Winchester. Under the Bill, English qualifying patients subject to the Mental Health Act 1983, including those on a community treatment order, will be covered by a new opt-out approach to advocacy. That mea…” healthsocial-care | 392 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting) “I thank the hon. Member for the intervention, but I simply repeat that under both the Act and this Bill, which will reform that Act, clinicians have the power to detain on the basis of a risk of harm that may occur, not one that has already or is happening at the same time, so, in my opinion, this power already exists.…” healthsocial-care | 470 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting) “I will touch on the questions that have been asked on cumulative and escalating behaviour, on having a review of public safety and on the training plan. The details will be provided for in a mixture of the code of practice and the annual written ministerial statement. The code of practice will be based on consulting bo…” healthsocial-care | 205 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting) “It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms Furniss. Government amendments 26 to 29 seek to remove previous amendments to the clause tabled by Lord Kamall, Earl Howe and Baroness May of Maidenhead, which added police and other authorised persons to sections 2, 3 and 5 of the Mental Health Act 1983, giving the po…” healthsocial-care | 498 |
| 11 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (Third sitting) “I beg to move amendment 26, in clause 5, page 11, line 22, leave out— “by a constable or other authorised person”. One of the tests for detaining a person under the mental health legislation is that harm may be caused, or that treatment is not possible, without detention. This amendment and amendments 27, 28 and 29 rem…” healthsocial-care | 78 |
| 9 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting) “There were a number of technical and drafting issues. The Public Bill Office ruled that the amendment, as drafted, was out of scope. One of the key concerns was about the unintended consequences of the relationship between physical disability and mental disorder. The drafting of the amendment could have caused confusio…” healthsocial-carelocal-government | 107 |
| 9 Jun 2025 | Mental Health Bill [ Lords ] (First sitting) “I just need to turn to the question asked by my hon. Friend the Member for Shipley. On strong duties, the code of practice flows from the primary legislation and therefore has a statutory power. There is no stronger power to ensure that people with learning disabilities and autism get the treatment, service and support…” healthsocial-carelocal-government | 269 |