My hon. Friend makes a good point. That is the premise on which the Bill introduced by Lord Saatchi in the other place earlier in the year in the previous Parliament was predicated. My hon. Friend is right that it is a controversial proposition that fear of litigation for medical negligence is putting clinicians off innovating. The evidence that the Government received through the consultation was that some clinicians do feel that is a problem, but very few saw it as the principal problem or the principal obstacle. A number of clinicians made the point that several factors have acted in recent decades to slow down the rate of innovative prescribing and other procedures in surgery and elsewhere, not least increasing central control of procurement from NHS England, which puts in place very tight procurement guidelines, as well as a general sense of an increasingly litigious society, which is just one of a number of factors cited in an extensive range of barriers to innovation.
Access to Medical Treatments (Innovation) Bill (Money)
Proceeding contribution from
George Freeman
(Conservative)
in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 3 November 2015.
It occurred during Debate on bills on Access to Medical Treatments (Innovation) Bill (Money).
About this proceeding contribution
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601 c923 Session
2015-16Chamber / Committee
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2017-03-22 15:55:46 +0000
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