Parliamentary questions can be asked by any MSP to the Scottish Government or the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body. The questions provide a means for 成人快手 to get factual and statistical information.
Urgent Questions aren't included in the Question and Answers search. There is a SPICe fact sheet listing Urgent and emergency questions.
Displaying 2580 questions Show Answers
To ask the Scottish Government how many mental health workers have been recruited through the Primary Care Improvement Fund, further to its reported forecast of having an additional 298 recruited by March 2022.
To ask the Scottish Government when the Cutaneous Melanoma QPI Review Group will publish the final cutaneous melanoma quality performance indicators document.
To ask the Scottish Government whether NHS boards are required to collate numbers of bronchiectasis diagnoses, and what the reasons are for its position on this matter.
To ask the Scottish Government what work it will undertake to improve data collection on people with (a) bronchiectasis and (b) other lung diseases.
To ask the Scottish Government what discussions it has had with NHS boards regarding the collation of lung disease diagnoses in each board.
To ask the Scottish Government how many people it estimates currently have a bronchiectasis diagnosis.
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide details of the repair costs for maintaining the Forth Road Bridge in (a) 2019-20 and (b) 2020-21.
To ask the Scottish Government for what reason it chose March 2023 as the date by which waiting lists for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and psychological therapies will be cleared, as set out in the NHS Recovery Plan 2021-2026, and whether it will publish the data and evidence that it has to support this decision.
To ask the Scottish Government, further to the commitment in the National Workforce Strategy for Health and Social Care in Scotland to recruit 320 additional Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) staff, how many such staff it has recruited in 2022 to date; whether it has set a timeline for this commitment to be fulfilled; how this interacts with targets to clear both CAMHS and psychological therapies waiting times by March 2023, and what specific targets it has in place to recruit these workers.
To ask the Scottish Government how the reported £40 million it invested in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) to improve services and reduce waiting times has been (a) allocated and (b) spent.