Third Reading

Part of Welfare Reform Bill – in the House of Lords at 3:30 pm on 31 January 2012.

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Photo of Lord Walton of Detchant Lord Walton of Detchant Crossbench 3:30, 31 January 2012

My Lords, I, too, wish to speak relatively briefly to this important amendment. In the course of my neurological training and in my career, I spent some time assessing children with cerebral palsy who attended the excellent Percy Hedley centre in Newcastle upon Tyne and received outstanding treatment. However, when I saw the varying degrees of disability produced by this group of conditions-a group of immense variability-and saw the effect that the condition of these children had on their families, sometimes leading to family breakdown, as the noble Baroness, Lady Browning, said, I became increasingly concerned about the evidence of the disability and the resultant poverty which developed in many of these families.

Some of my personal research was dealing with a progressive disease-Duchenne muscular dystrophy-where young boys born apparently normal would begin at about the age of three to have difficulty in walking. They then began to have problems with falling frequently and getting up from the floor, and progressively became increasingly disabled so that many of them were taken to a wheelchair by the time that they were aged 10. I saw the effect that this had when not just one but two boys might be affected in an individual family, and the problems faced by those parents were immense. I shall never forget one mother saying to me, "I see my son die a little every day".

I am not talking just about static conditions such as cerebral palsy-although even in cerebral palsy as the child becomes older, the disability may remain neurologically non-progressive-but about the problems that begin to emerge over schooling and a whole series of other issues, which become increasingly important and increasingly matters for concern. I could go on about my personal experience in the field of neurology and paediatric neurology but I would simply say that this is a very worthwhile amendment, and one which deserves your Lordships' support.