ClickPeterborough
  • News
  • Crime
  • Things To Do
  • Your Views
No Result
View All Result
  • TRENDING:
  • Peterborough
  • Cambridge
  • Huntingdon
  • March
  • Wisbech
  • Ely
  • Fenland
  • Whittlesey
  • St Ives
Saturday, June 28, 2025
ClickPeterborough
  • News
  • Crime
  • Things To Do
  • Your Views
No Result
View All Result
ClickPeterborough
Support Us
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crime
  • Things To Do
  • Your Views
Home News

Mayor Nik Johnson: ‘Ours is a region also having to contend with multiple layers of really very entrenched, very pronounced poverty and deprivation’

His speech to Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Healthwatch summit

John Elworthy by John Elworthy
8:27am, October 7 2024
in News
News for Peterborough -
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Dr Nik Johnson rounded off the Healthwatch Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Summit on tackling health inequalities with reflections on his own medical career and the challenges facing the health sector.

His speech to the summit, held on October 2, can be read below.

Read more about the summit:

https://www.healthwatchcambridgeshire.co.uk/news/2024-10-03/healthwatch-summit-exposes-health-inequalities-and-calls-change

I’m Nik Johnson, and I am here today as Mayor of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority. But I’m also here as a still practicing children’s doctor, with a weekly clinic at Hinchingbrooke Hospital.

It might be obvious, but I’ve been a medic a good while longer than I’ve been a mayor, and in many ways I wanted to be the mayor BECAUSE I was a doctor.

Because of all the things I was having to deal with for the kids I see and their families.

Treating the patients without actually being able to solve the problems that were making them ill in the first place.

Be it prescribing inhalers but being powerless on air quality.

Or diagnosing chest infections, whilst unable to do anything about damp and mouldy homes.

Or offering regular, consistent care, all the while helpless in the face of no-fault eviction.

In so many cases it felt more and more like I just couldn’t do enough and that didn’t sit right with me.

So, the likes of Sir Michael Marmot, and their work on the wider social determinants of health and need to fundamentally change how we tackle underlying health inequalities was, as the saying goes, music to my ears.

And I feel exactly the same way about today’s conference and having the fortune of speaking later in the day, I’ve had the privilege of listening to the many excellent contributions made thus far.

And knowing that so many of us feel the same way about the size and shape of these problems, and the need to go about solving them differently, is a source of huge comfort and confidence.

As I say, I’ve listened – and I should say how much I welcome and respect the fact that the importance of listening to those with lived experience is such an integral part of today’s conference – but as I say, I’ve listened and, if you’ll indulge me, just want to reflect on few on my personal highlights.

Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Dr Nik Johnson at the Healthwatch Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Summit on tackling health inequalities
Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Dr Nik Johnson at the Healthwatch Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Summit on tackling health inequalities

As for me as mayor, as personally and professionally motivated as I am to help everyone I meet in any way I can, I do get that the combinations of opportunity and obligation that I have as the elected head of a combined authority demand that I think and work at the more strategic level.

Not least because, as we all clearly appreciate, the consequences of unequal health outcomes aren’t just profoundly felt by those most immediately affected.

As we know, they go well beyond the individual, rippling out through households, communities, towns, cities, regions, even nations.

They can have significant impacts on society, both socially and economically, and as mayor, it’s the economy that I’m tasked with supporting.

And as economies go, that of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough presents some uncommon complexities and unwelcome contradictions.

Crudely, for everything here considered world class or leading edge, for every successful spin-out, every IPO, every unicorn, ours is a region also having to contend with multiple layers of really very entrenched, very pronounced poverty and deprivation.

For me as mayor, cutting to the case, this dual reality – the vast divide – lays bare the responsibility of the state and the urgency with which we need to intervene.

These gross disparities will not resolve themselves.

Instead, as they have been for some time, they will only exacerbate and compound to the very substantial detriment of us all.

So, what does this mean for a Combined Authority?

What’s it got to do with a Mayor?

Well, for example, you might have seen that, since the general election, we have been talking a lot about what government wants from us in terms of ‘Local Growth Plans’.

Advertisements
canopyuk.com in-article

Looking at what our region does best and how we might best help these various sectors to prosper.

But it’s not all about GDP.

For me, true progress is reflected in how well we address and reduce inequalities.

The benefits of a thriving economy should be universal.

Economic growth, when pursued intelligently, and compassionately, with a focus on reducing inequalities, can, should, and must significantly improve public health.

To achieve these goals, we must consider the structural changes needed to support our efforts.

I’d argue that, via this government’s ambitions for further devolution, providing the necessary responsibilities to local and regional government, Mayoral Combined Authorities like Cambridgeshire and Peterborough is a crucial step.

We, in concert with our partners, are uniquely positioned to understand and address the specific needs of our communities.

We can ensure that local solutions are tailored to local problems, leading to more effective and sustainable outcomes.

This might sound like an awkward segue, but genuinely, a hugely impactful, readily deliverable, practical intervention revolves around better public transport, not least in the form of ubiquitous bus services.

Rural and semi-rural isolation are big issues for us, for the person, and for the multitude of missed opportunities.

Improved connectivity can open up a whole new world.

Opportunities for education, employment, and healthcare, particularly for those in deprived areas.

A chance to socialise, to be active, to be immersed in the wealth of cultural offerings, be they creative, heritage, or historic.

To be somewhere new.

To be someone new.

Simply put, by working consistently, collectively, in pursuit of much, much better civic infrastructure of which public transport is up there with good quality affordable housing, we can begin to bridge the gaps that, in terms of quality of life and life chances, are so shamefully keeping us apart.

Let me stress though the ‘begin’ part of what I’ve just said – not for one minute do I think public health solutions lie solely in new stuff, be they buses, houses, or jobs.

Yes, of course, those things are essential.

They are non-negotiables.

And they will go a long way to making things better for lots and lots of people.

But they are not it, they are not everything.

As I see it, we also need a fundamental mindset shift.

From front line public servants to the most senior members of government, to solve our public health crises, we need compassion, empathy, and a willingness to acknowledge that many of our most treasured institutions need to change if we are to change the fortunes of not only those most in need but also those of our collective selves.

Very happily, as is evident from today’s events, none of this is starting from zero.

Very clearly, we are all well aware of the scope and scale of the challenge and, very clearly are well beyond the point of just being ready and willing to act as obviously all manner of extremely impressive and most welcome action is well underway.

And long may that continue.

 

 

 

Cathedral Shaun
Advertisements
Pictures

Advertisement
Tags: Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined AuthorityHealth inequalitiesHealthwatch CambridgeshireHomepageMayor Dr Nik JohnsonPeterborough
ShareTweetSend
Next Post
News for Peterborough - Labour run Peterborough City Council squeezed through a Council Tax increase for 2025/26 of 4.99 per cent by just three votes. The increase equates to £1.59 a week for a Band D property.

17 Code of Conduct complaints face Peterborough City Council

News for Peterborough - Cinderella opens on Thursday 28 November 2024 and runs until Sunday 5 January 2025. Pictures: Richard Hubert Smith

Be ready to be exquisitely charmed by Cinderella at Cambridge Arts Theatre

Help us by Donating

News for Peterborough -
News

Peterborough Marks Armed Forces Day with Flag-Raising Ceremony

June 23, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

UPDATE: Peterborough Councillor Re-arrested for Sexual Offences

June 23, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

City Councillor from Peterborough arrested for sexual offences.

June 22, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

Man Arrested Following Double Stabbing in Peterborough City Centre

June 20, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

Cambridgeshire Fire service urges people to enjoy warm weather safely

June 19, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

REPAIR WORK ON £32M KING’S DYKE BRIDGE WILL LAST 22 WEEKS

June 18, 2025
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
News for Peterborough - Police are appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage after a man died in a collision near Ely.

Owen Bird of March charged after A605 death crash which killed Peterborough man

December 27, 2024
News for Peterborough -

Threat to close £32m King’s Dyke crossing at Whittlesey if movement and cracking intensifies

October 18, 2024
News for Peterborough - Family and friends have paid tribute to talented musician Nick Smith of Peterborough whose death has been confirmed overnight. He was a member of Genesis Connected. PHOTO: Genesis Connected

Tributes to Peterborough musician Nick Smith of Genesis Connected

January 24, 2025
News for Peterborough -

VIDEO: Freight train hits Iceland delivery truck at March, Cambridgeshire

October 15, 2024
News for Peterborough -

High Flyer makes a ‘mug’ of planners

0

Town with unenviable crime record

0
News for Peterborough -

New owners of historic Cambridgeshire hotel bans sale of booze

0
News for Peterborough -

Child cruelty sentences for baby’s parents

0
News for Peterborough -

Peterborough Marks Armed Forces Day with Flag-Raising Ceremony

June 23, 2025
News for Peterborough -

UPDATE: Peterborough Councillor Re-arrested for Sexual Offences

June 23, 2025
News for Peterborough -

City Councillor from Peterborough arrested for sexual offences.

June 22, 2025
News for Peterborough -

Man Arrested Following Double Stabbing in Peterborough City Centre

June 20, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

Peterborough Marks Armed Forces Day with Flag-Raising Ceremony

June 23, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

UPDATE: Peterborough Councillor Re-arrested for Sexual Offences

June 23, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

City Councillor from Peterborough arrested for sexual offences.

June 22, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

Man Arrested Following Double Stabbing in Peterborough City Centre

June 20, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

Cambridgeshire Fire service urges people to enjoy warm weather safely

June 19, 2025
News for Peterborough -
News

REPAIR WORK ON £32M KING’S DYKE BRIDGE WILL LAST 22 WEEKS

June 18, 2025
  • News
  • Local Council
  • Investigations
  • Things To Do
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© COPYRIGHT - UNIT 2 FENGATE TRADEPARK PETERBOROUGH PE15XB

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • 360 Examples
  • Advertise with us
  • ARTICLE FOOTER NOT FOR PUBLICATION
  • Basket
  • Beer Festival VR 360
  • Buy Adspace
  • Cambridgeshire
  • Cancel donation
  • Cathedral Example 360
  • Cathedral Plan
  • Checkout
  • Checkout
  • Complaints
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • cookie-policy
  • Elementor #420
  • Hide Ads for Premium Members
  • Home
    • CambsNews Live
  • Latest News
  • Media Consent Form
  • Memorial Garden Example
  • My Account
  • My account
  • Notices
  • Notices Form
  • Privacy Policy
  • PU test
  • Sample Page
  • Sample Page
  • Shop
  • SiteMap
  • Submit Your News
  • Support our work.
  • test2
  • Thank you for your donation
  • Upload your ads

© COPYRIGHT - UNIT 2 FENGATE TRADEPARK PETERBOROUGH PE15XB