PHB
01
Bil
Iechyd y Cyhoedd (Cymru)
Public
Health (Wales) Bill
Ymateb
gan: Brian Jones
Response
from: Brian Jones
I’m broadly in favour of all the measures contained in the
bill, but any specific comments are in green following the relevant
bullet point.
·
re-state restrictions on smoking in enclosed and substantially
enclosed public and work places, and give Welsh Ministers a
regulation-making power to extend the restrictions on smoking to
additional premises or vehicles;
yes
-
place restrictions on smoking in school grounds, hospital grounds
and public playgrounds;
public playgrounds straight-forward yes, but although I am very
firmly anti-smoking, I do think that some provision for smoking
does need to be made for school and hospital employees, and
hospital patients
-
provide for the creation of a national register of retailers of
tobacco and nicotine products;
yes
-
provide Welsh Ministers with a regulation-making power to add to
the offences which contribute to a Restricted Premises Order (RPO)
in Wales;
yes
-
prohibit the handing over of tobacco and/or nicotine products to a
person under the age of 18;
yes
-
provide for the creation of a mandatory licensing scheme for
practitioners and businesses carrying out ’special
procedures’, namely acupuncture, body piercing, electrolysis
and tattooing;
definitely necessary. I believe that there already is a similar
licensing scheme for tanning studios – perhaps you could
confirm this. I would also want to see a mandatory licensing scheme
for cosmetic surgery procedures, which was talked about in the
media following the PIP breast implant problems – again
perhaps you can confirm if there already is such a licensing and
recording scheme, either UK-wide or here in Wales, and if not,
would it be possible for the Welsh Assembly to introduce such a
scheme in Wales.
-
introduce a prohibition on the intimate piercing of persons under
the age of 16 years;
well yes of course, and I wouldn’t want the bill blocked on
this point, but – as ever – there’s the
difficulty of setting the age. As currently proposed, a 17-year old
could have an intimate piercing but giving them tobacco would be
prohibited … The United Nations’ Convention on the
Rights of the Child, signed and ratified by the UK, defines
children as being under 18. It would seem more logical to me that
intimate piercing of children should be prohibited, and therefore
the age limit should be “under 18” rather than
“under 16”. I realise that there would be a risk of 16
and 17 year olds then resorting to illegal intimate piercings,
either at home or abroad, but I think that a much stronger message
is sent by prohibiting the intimate piercing of children under the
age of 18 years.
-
require Welsh Ministers to make regulations to require public
bodies to carry out health impact assessments in specified
circumstances;
yes
-
change the arrangements for determining applications for entry onto
the pharmaceutical list of health boards (LHBs), to a system based
on the pharmaceutical needs of local communities;
yes
-
require local authorities to prepare a local strategy to plan how
they will meet the needs of their communities for accessing toilet
facilities for public use;
yes
and
-
enable a ‘food authority’ under the Food Hygiene Rating
(Wales) Act 2013 to retain fixed penalty receipts resulting from
offences under that Act, for the purpose of enforcing the
food
hygiene rating scheme. yes
Personally, I was disappointed by the dropping of restrictions on e
cigarettes, but unusually I agree with Carwyn Jones that there is
little point in returning to this issue at the moment.