Councillor Samina Nagra
Council: Westminster
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
5 meetings
North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee - Thursday, 19 March 2026 - 10.00 am
The North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee met on Thursday 19 March 2026 to discuss several key health service matters across the region. The meeting's agenda included updates on planned service moves, cancer prevention and early diagnosis initiatives, and the transformation of a specialist mental health ward.
North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee - Tuesday 9th December, 2025 10.00 am
North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee - Thursday 17th July, 2025 10.00 am
The North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (NWL JHOSC) convened to discuss several key healthcare issues affecting the region, including maternity provisions, adult mental health services, and the reconfiguration of the Integrated Care Board (ICB). Councillors also planned to review the committee's recommendations tracker and upcoming work programme.
North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee - Thursday 1st May, 2025 10.00 am
The North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee met to discuss significant updates on community-based specialist palliative care services and the future of Mount Vernon Cancer Centre. Key decisions included the formal decision to not reopen beds at Gordon Hospital and the ongoing consultation for a new model of community specialist palliative care across North West London.
North West London Joint Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee - Thursday 13th March, 2025 10.00 am
Decisions from Meetings
0 decisions
No decisions found for the selected date range. Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
Summary
Meetings Attended: 5
Average per Month: 0.4
Decisions Recorded: 0 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.