Source · Select Committees · Women and Equalities Committee
Fourth report: Unequal impact? Coronavirus, disability and access to services: full Report
Women and Equalities Committee
HC 1050
Published 22 December 2020
Recommendations
3
Para 27
We welcome the steps the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has taken to emphasise...
Recommendation
We welcome the steps the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has taken to emphasise that food retailers’ legal obligations to make reasonable adjustments for disabled people have remained in place throughout the pandemic. We fully endorse its new guidance …
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Government Equalities Office
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4
Para 28
We further recommend the Government consider, with disabled people, as part of its consultation on...
Recommendation
We further recommend the Government consider, with disabled people, as part of its consultation on the proposed National Strategy for Disabled People, the steps needed to more effectively adopt a social model of disability in relation to maintaining disabled people’s …
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Government Equalities Office
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5
Ministers paused the national shielding programme in August and in September asserted that “we need...
Recommendation
Ministers paused the national shielding programme in August and in September asserted that “we need to get away from the food parcel model”, without offering any evidence of the Government’s assessment of the level of disabled people’s needs for help …
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Government Equalities Office
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8
Para 55
The Equality Act 2010’s Public Sector Equality Duty is intended to ensure public authorities have...
Recommendation
The Equality Act 2010’s Public Sector Equality Duty is intended to ensure public authorities have due regard, including in their decision making, policies and service delivery, to achieving the Act’s objectives, which include the elimination of discrimination against groups of …
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Government Equalities Office
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9
Para 64
Prior to the pandemic, people with learning disabilities experienced health inequalities and faced difficulties accessing...
Recommendation
Prior to the pandemic, people with learning disabilities experienced health inequalities and faced difficulties accessing healthcare and receiving accurate diagnoses and effective treatments. They had increased risks of dying from a range of illnesses, including respiratory infections. These problems have …
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12
The Government must bring forward a social care reform package, which includes the whole sector,...
Recommendation
The Government must bring forward a social care reform package, which includes the whole sector, in this financial year. There has been a tendency by successive governments to focus on the problem of rising costs of caring for elderly people, …
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14
Para 98
Delivering effective support for children and young people with SEND during a public health crisis...
Recommendation
Delivering effective support for children and young people with SEND during a public health crisis was inevitably a massive challenge, to which some local authorities were unable to rise. The pandemic demonstrated and exacerbated a widely acknowledged pre-existing crisis in …
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Government Equalities Office
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16
We agree that catch up funding should be weighted towards children who have been “hardest...
Recommendation
We agree that catch up funding should be weighted towards children who have been “hardest hit” by disruption to their education. We know that many children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) will be in the hardest hit group; …
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17
Para 112
There was a clear divergence of opinion between some disabled people and their organisations, who...
Recommendation
There was a clear divergence of opinion between some disabled people and their organisations, who felt excluded and ignored by the Government, and Ministers, who described their engagement with disabled stakeholders during the pandemic as very positive, open and effective. …
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Government Equalities Office
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18
Para 117
The way the Government has communicated with disabled people has, on occasions, caused confusion and...
Recommendation
The way the Government has communicated with disabled people has, on occasions, caused confusion and compounded already keenly felt anxiety. The chosen method and timing of communications with people categorised as clinically extremely vulnerable, and therefore likely to be living …
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19
Para 124
The accessibility of the Government’s communications to disabled people during the pandemic has been poor...
Recommendation
The accessibility of the Government’s communications to disabled people during the pandemic has been poor from the outset of lockdown in March. The Government has been far too slow to address concerns, notably about the lack of British Sign Language …
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Government Equalities Office
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20
Para 125
NHS health and publicly funded social care services are legally required, by the Accessible Information...
Recommendation
NHS health and publicly funded social care services are legally required, by the Accessible Information Standard, published under section 250 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012, to provide health and care information to patients and service users in …
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Government Equalities Office
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21
We agree with organisations representing Deaf British Sign Language users that we should set a...
Recommendation
We agree with organisations representing Deaf British Sign Language users that we should set a good example in the accessibility of our public oral evidence sessions. It is regrettable that we did not provide live BSL interpretation and subtitles via …
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Government Equalities Office
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Conclusions (9)
1
Conclusion
We welcome the Government’s decision to discontinue the Coronavirus Act’s Mental Health Act provisions, which potentially relaxed requirements for sectioning, against the grain of overdue and much-needed reforms, and which thankfully proved to be unnecessary in England. We will continue to push for progress towards implementation of our recommendations on …
2
Conclusion
Para 26
The Government’s focus on people defined as “clinically extremely vulnerable” (CEV) to the virus, while rational from a medical perspective, was an inappropriate proxy for the need for support with access to food and had unintended consequences. It was rapidly established and broadly effective for those on the CEV list, …
6
Conclusion
Para 37
We will continue to push for greater accountability and transparency while Care Act easements remain available to local authorities and for their swift repeal should the pandemic become more clearly under control before or at the next six-monthly parliamentary review, due in spring 2021.
7
Conclusion
Para 54
Early in the pandemic, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence’s (NICE) critical care guidelines and doctors’ inappropriate or blanket use of “Do not attempt resuscitation” (DNAR) notices were potentially discriminatory. While we welcome actions taken swiftly to address disabled people’s concerns, and steps subsequently taken by NICE and …
10
Conclusion
Para 68
The widespread adoption of continuous facemask wearing in health and social care settings has made effective communication impossible for patients and healthcare professionals who lip-read, and much more difficult for Deaf people who use British Sign Language and people with disabilities which mean they are more reliant on facial expressions …
11
Conclusion
We were disappointed with the 2020 Spending Review’s financial settlement of £300 million in additional grant funding for local authorities’ social care in 2021/22. We believe it falls considerably short of what is required. We agree with the Health and Social Care Committee that an increase in funding for social …
13
Conclusion
Para 87
Our interim Report made several recommendations about how the Secretary of State should use his powers in relation to duties towards children and young people’s educational, health and care needs, if they are required again during the pandemic. We also made recommendations about the Government’s guidance to local authorities on …
15
Conclusion
Para 104
We welcome the Government’s educational catch up fund made up of £650 million to be allocated across all schools and £350 million for pupils in more disadvantaged schools to access subsidised small group tutoring and mentoring.
22
Conclusion
In the light of starkly disproportionate and tragic data on death rates from coronavirus of disabled people, including shocking figures for deaths of people, including young people, with learning disabilities, there must be a discrete independent inquiry into the causes. It must be a wide-ranging inquiry, including consideration of the …