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 2584 questions Show Answers
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of NHS England planning to provide placental growth-based blood tests to better diagnose pre-eclampsia and manage risk using the Accelerated Access Collaborative, whether there are similar plans to introduce such testing in Scotland.
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of its publication, Good Food Nation proposals for legislation: analysis of consultation responses, what it is doing to ensure that workers in the food industry receive fair pay; whether it considers there is a need for mandatory food labelling and, if so, for what reason; what its position is on concerns regarding the loss of farmland due to house building, and what action it will take regarding any such loss.
To ask the Scottish Government what steps it is taking to raise awareness of pre-eclampsia, eclampsia and HELLP syndrome among healthcare professionals.
To ask the Scottish Government how many live homeless applications there were in each local authority area on Christmas Day in 2018, and how many (a) adults and (b) children these related to.
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of the outcome of the extracorporeal life support study, what it is doing to improve earlier detection of lung cancer, including whether it plans to roll out a programme of the EarlyCDT/lung blood test.
To ask the Scottish Government by what date it will publish the responses to its consultation, Incorporating the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child into Scots Law.
To ask the Scottish Government when it will provide a response to question S5W-24660, which had an expected answer date of 6 September 2019.
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of the comment in its September 2019 paper, Annual Report on Welfare Reform, that "alongside removal of the first child premium, [key recent changes to the welfare system] could reduce benefit spending in Scotland by around £500 million per year once [universal credit] is fully rolled out", how it plans to allocate this additional £500 million annually.
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of figures publish by The Joseph Rowntree Foundation, which estimate that, by 2020, benefit changes will bring 400,000 people across the UK into poverty, what action it plans to support people in Scotland.
To ask the Scottish Government what it is doing to support children and their families who are affected by Developmental Language Disorder.