Transgender women 'won't be treated in female wards in hospitals'
Transgender women will be banned from being treated in female hospital wards in England, the health secretary is set to announce today.
Steve Barclay is expected to announce plans to push back against what he calls ‘wokery’ in the NHS in his conference speech later today.
He said ‘wokery’ has led to women’s rights being increasingly sidelined.
Mr Barclay said: ‘We need a common-sense approach to sex and equality issues in the NHS. That is why I am announcing proposals for clearer rights for patients.’
He said sex-specific language has also been restored to health advice pages about cervical and ovarian cancer and the menopause.
Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, he said: ‘It is vital that women’s voices are heard in the NHS and the privacy, dignity and safety of all patients are protected.’
A source close to Mr Barclay told Sky News he was ‘fed up with this agenda and the damage it’s causing, language like ‘chestfeeding’, talking about pregnant ‘people’ rather than women’.
They added: ‘It exasperates the vast majority of people, and he is determined to take action on it.
‘He is concerned that women’s voices should be heard on healthcare and that too often wokery and ideological dogma is getting in the way of this.’
In April, Equalities minister Kemi Badenoch said the government could ban trans women from entering female-only spaces, and asked parliament’s human rights watchdog for its advice to change official wording from just ‘sex’ to ‘biological sex’, which she described as a ‘technical and contested area of law’.
Elsewhere in his speech, Mr Barclay will announce an expansion of NHS training and funding of new technology in the health service.
He will also announce new medical schools in Worcester, Chester and Uxbridge, as well as an increase in the number of places up and down the country for students wanting to train to be doctors.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].
For more stories like this, check our news page.
Source: Read Full Article