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Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 21 Jan 2015
National Health Service

"rose..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

View all Frank Dobson (Lab - Holborn and St Pancras) contributions to the debate on: National Health Service

Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 21 Jan 2015
National Health Service

"Will the Secretary of State confirm that the only reason why he has been able to recruit British doctors is that the previous Government increased recruitment into medical schools by 35%?..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

View all Frank Dobson (Lab - Holborn and St Pancras) contributions to the debate on: National Health Service

Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 21 Jan 2015
National Health Service

"Whatever people like or dislike about the language, I do not think anyone could deny that the NHS at the moment is struggling to care for patients in the way that the hard-working staff in the NHS would like to be able to care for them and to deal with …..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

View all Frank Dobson (Lab - Holborn and St Pancras) contributions to the debate on: National Health Service

Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 21 Jan 2015
National Health Service

"I entirely agree with that. The fact is that the services that can be provided at home need a higher priority than they have had in the past—under any Government. They need more staff with more time, because many of the people attempting to provide a service are given a …..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

View all Frank Dobson (Lab - Holborn and St Pancras) contributions to the debate on: National Health Service

Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 21 Jan 2015
National Health Service

"I should point out that, partly as a result of earlier negotiations, we had secured an increase of £20 billion...."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

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Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 21 Jan 2015
National Health Service

"Will the right hon. Gentleman give way?..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

View all Frank Dobson (Lab - Holborn and St Pancras) contributions to the debate on: National Health Service

Written Question
Accident and Emergency Departments
Monday 12th January 2015

Asked by: Frank Dobson (Labour - Holborn and St Pancras)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what proportion of callers to (a) NHS Direct and (b) NHS 111 were (i) referred to hospital accident and emergency departments and (ii) sent to such departments by ambulance in each year from 2005-06.

Answered by Jane Ellison

This information is not available in the format requested.

Around a quarter of calls to NHS Direct over the period 2007/08 to 2011/12 resulted in an emergency or urgent referral.

For the period 2011/12 – 2013/14, the proportion of calls triaged by NHS 111 which resulted in an ambulance being dispatched or the caller being recommended to attend accident and emergency (A&E) was 18.3%.

However, the figures on NHS Direct from NHS Direct’s Annual Reports contain the percentages of urgent and emergency onward referrals; these comprise not just calls referred to A&E, but also to 999, and urgent primary care referrals. In the NHS 111 data collection published by NHS England, referrals to primary care are separate from A&E referrals and from ambulance dispatches. Therefore, the percentages for the two services cannot be directly compared.

The following table lists the proportion of calls to NHS Direct which have resulted in emergency and urgent referrals for each financial year from 2007/08 to 2012/131.

Period

% of emergency and urgent referrals

2007/08

28%

2008/09

24%

2009/10

26.4%

2010/11

24.9%

2011/12

27%

2012/13

34.7%

Source: NHS Direct National Health Service Trust, Annual Report & Accounts for financial years 2007/08 to 2012/13

The table below shows counts of NHS 111 calls where (i) callers are recommended to attend hospital accident and emergency departments, and (ii) an ambulance is dispatched2, from August 2010 to November 2014. The figures are averages from published monthly data.

2010-11 (August 2010 – March 2011)

2011-12

2012-13

2013-14

2014-15

(April 2014 – November 2014)

Calls offered

187,630

616,155

1,894,057

8,785,341

8,150,979

Calls where person triaged

112,388

425,815

1,254,339

7,064,219

6,565,416

Calls where A&E recommended

7,444

28,560

80,232

526,520

515,593

Of calls triaged, proportion where A&E recommended

6.6%

6.7%

6.4%

7.5%

7.9%

Calls where ambulance dispatched

13,618

54,145

151,014

756,768

720,656

Of calls triaged, proportion where Ambulance dispatched

12.1%

12.7%

12.0%

10.7%

11.0%

Source: NHS England – NHS 111 Minimum Data Set (www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/category/statistics/nhs-111-statistics)

Notes

1. The NHS Direct National Health Service Trust, Annual Report & Accounts reports list the following Key Performance Indicators in the Appendix in describing how the measure was calculated.

KPI Name

Purpose

Data Source

Definition

Calculation

% Urgent and
Emergency Onward
Referrals

Value to Patients and
NHS

Clinical Assessment System (CAS)

% of emergency and urgent
referrals for Core calls only

(The number of calls referred to
999, A&E or PCS Urgent / Number
of calls with clinical dispositions)
x 100

111 Calls Requiring
Onward or Urgent
Emergency Referral

Measure Value to NHS

Pathways

Proportion of symptomatic
calls referred to urgent &
emergency care dispositions

999 + A&E + PCS urgent ÷
symptomatic calls

2. The proportions of calls where an ambulance is dispatched, and where the caller is referred to A&E, are calculated out of the number of calls triaged. The total number of calls offered includes calls which are answered but not triaged (such as callers following up previous calls, or seeking contact details for specific health services, or not wanting or not able to give details about the specific health condition, or where the patient recovers); along with calls which are abandoned before being answered.

3. Both NHS Direct and NHS 111 percentages in this answer are calculated as proportions of all calls with clinical dispositions, or in other words, all calls that are triaged.


Speech in Commons Chamber - Wed 07 Jan 2015
A and E (Major Incidents)

"Does the Secretary of State accept the truth of the assertions by A and E doctors and nurses that the call handlers working for the 111 service are referring far more patients to A and E than happened when NHS Direct was staffed by nurses, who exercised professional discretion?..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

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Speech in Commons Chamber - Mon 05 Jan 2015
UK Ebola Preparedness

"I thank the Secretary of State for his statement. I am in no position whatever to comment on the effectiveness of the screening and suspect that no one else in the Chamber is. On long-term preparedness, it is several decades since Peter Piot, now director of the London School of …..."
Frank Dobson - View Speech

View all Frank Dobson (Lab - Holborn and St Pancras) contributions to the debate on: UK Ebola Preparedness

Written Question
Health and Social Care Act 2012
Monday 5th January 2015

Asked by: Frank Dobson (Labour - Holborn and St Pancras)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what estimate he has made of the change in annual transaction costs in the NHS as a result of implementation of the Health and Social Care Act 2012.

Answered by Dan Poulter

The Department’s use of the term ‘Transaction costs’ relates to those costs paid in support of National Health Service provider transactions such as mergers, acquisitions or separations. Specifically, they are the costs of planning, preparing and undertaking the transaction itself and achieving contractual close.

The Department does not make estimates of these costs. Transaction costs are considered by the Department on a case by case basis in the context of the overall value for money of the wider transaction.