Heading: |
Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill |
Question ID: |
1804147 |
UIN: |
53337 |
House: |
Commons |
Date tabled: |
2025-05-19 |
Asking Member ID: |
5168 |
Asking Member display name: |
Adam Jogee
|
Asking Member handle: |
|
Asking Member Twitter reference: |
Adam Jogee
|
Member interest: |
false |
Question text: |
To ask the hon. Member for Battersea, representing the Church Commissioners, what assessment the Church of England has made of the potential impact of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill on Church-owned hospices. |
Is named day: |
false |
Date of holding answer: |
|
Date answered: |
2025-05-29 |
Date answer corrected: |
|
Is holding answer: |
false |
Is correcting answer: |
false |
Answering Member ID: |
4676 |
Answering Member display name: |
Marsha De Cordova
|
Answering Member handle: |
Marshadecordova
|
Answering Member Twitter reference: |
@Marshadecordova
|
Correcting Member ID: |
|
Correcting Member display name: |
|
Correcting Member handle: |
|
Correcting Member Twitter reference: |
|
Answer text: |
Thanks to the pioneering work of Dame Cicely Saunders, many modern hospices started off as church-affiliated institutions. The majority of these organisations and charities have now become affiliated to Hospice UK, which supports over 200 hospices across ... |
Original answer text: |
|
Comparable answer text: |
|
Answering body ID: |
9 |
Answering body name: |
Church Commissioners |
Tweeted: |
true |