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.
Urgent Questions aren't included in the Question and Answers search. There is a SPICe fact sheet listing Urgent and emergency questions.
Displaying 9238 questions Show Answers
To ask the Scottish Government, further to the answer to question S5W-29542 by Clare Haughey on 9 June 2020, whether the official Scottish suicide statistics for 2020 will be available in June 2021, as previously stated.
To ask the Scottish Government, further to the answer to question S5W-29542 by Clare Haughey on 9 June 2020, what plans it has to increase how frequently statistics relating to suicide are published.
To ask the Scottish Government what (a) guidance and (b) resources were given to health and social care partnerships, in relation to the implementation of the Coronavirus (Scotland) Act 2020.
To ask the Scottish Government how much it has spent on the NHS Scotland Protect Scotland app.
To ask the Scottish Government how many users of the NHS Scotland Protect Scotland app there have been in each month since its launch.
To ask the Scottish Government how many people have been (a) identified and (b) contacted through the NHS Scotland Protect Scotland app in each month since its launch.
To ask the Scottish Government what the cost of maintaining and operating the NHS Scotland Protect Scotland app has been in each month since its launch.
To ask the Scottish Government how many people have (a) de-registered from and (b) deleted the NHS Scotland Protect Scotland app in each month since its launch.
To ask the Scottish Government whether it is on track to meet the proposed summer 2022 deadline for the delivery of personal independence payments by Social Security Scotland.
To ask the Scottish Government, further to the answers to questions S4W-18890 and S4W-20593 by Alex Neil on 8 January and 4 April 2014 and S4W-27915 by Shona Robison 29 October 2015, the 2011 report, A Study of Medical Negligence Claiming in Scotland, which was published by the No-fault Compensation Review Group that was chaired by Professor Sheila McLean of the University of Glasgow and its consultation on the matter in 2012, whether it will bring forward legislation to introduce a no-fault compensation for patients who have been harmed as a result of clinical treatment.