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Written Question
Carers
Tuesday 7th March 2017

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, when the Government plans to publish the new carers strategy.

Answered by David Mowat

The Department expects to publish the new national strategy for carers in the spring. No publication date has yet been set.


Written Question
Hip Replacements
Monday 6th March 2017

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how many patients have had to wait longer than (a) two weeks, (b) five weeks, (c) 10 weeks and (d) 15 weeks between being assessed for hip replacement surgery and that surgery taking place.

Answered by Philip Dunne

Information is collected representing the time from decision to admit to treatment for knee and hip replacement surgery. The latest available data is for 2015-16 and is shown in the following table.

A count of finished admission episodes (FAEs) 1 with an eligible time waited from decision to admit to treatment for main2 or secondary3 procedure for hip and knee replacements (and revisions) with waiting times (in days) of two and five weeks (14 - 35 days), between five and 10 weeks (36 - 70 days), between 10 and 15 weeks (71 - 105 days) and longer than 15 weeks (106 days and over) in England for 2015-16

Time Waited (Days)

Hip operations (FAEs)

Knee operations (FAEs)

2-5 weeks (14-35 days)

8,826

9,341

5-10 weeks (36-70 days)

17,893

19,672

10-15 weeks (71-105 days)

16,220

18,992

15 weeks and over (106 days and over)

20,941

27,169

Source: Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), NHS Digital, Activity in English National Health Service Hospitals and English NHS commissioned activity in the independent sector

Notes

  1. Total admissions with eligible time waited information

The total number of eligible admissions includes waiting list, booked admissions and planned (elective) admissions. A waiting list admission is one in which a patient has been admitted electively into hospital from a waiting list, having been given no date of admission at the time a decision to admit was made. Booked admissions are those in which the patient was admitted electively having been given a date at the time it was decided to admit. Planned admissions are usually part of a planned sequence of clinical care determined mainly on clinical criteria, which, for example, could require a series of events, perhaps taking place every three months, six months or annually. A FAE is the first period of admitted patient care under one consultant within one healthcare provider. FAEs are counted against the year or month in which the admission episode finishes. Admissions do not represent the number of patients, as a person may have more than one admission within the period.

  1. Main procedure

The first recorded procedure or intervention in each episode, usually the most resource intensive procedure or intervention performed during the episode. It is appropriate to use main procedure when looking at admission details, (eg time waited), but a more complete count of episodes with a particular procedure is obtained by looking at the main and the secondary procedures.

  1. Secondary procedure

As well as the main procedure, there are up to 23 (11 from 2002-03 to 2006-07 and three prior to 2002-03) secondary procedure fields in HES that show secondary procedures performed on the patient during the episode of care.


Written Question
Knee Replacements
Monday 6th March 2017

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how many patients have waited longer than (a) two weeks, (b) five weeks, (c) 10 weeks and (d) 15 weeks between an assessment for knee replacement surgery and for that surgery taking place.

Answered by Philip Dunne

Information is collected representing the time from decision to admit to treatment for knee and hip replacement surgery. The latest available data is for 2015-16 and is shown in the following table.

A count of finished admission episodes (FAEs) 1 with an eligible time waited from decision to admit to treatment for main2 or secondary3 procedure for hip and knee replacements (and revisions) with waiting times (in days) of two and five weeks (14 - 35 days), between five and 10 weeks (36 - 70 days), between 10 and 15 weeks (71 - 105 days) and longer than 15 weeks (106 days and over) in England for 2015-16

Time Waited (Days)

Hip operations (FAEs)

Knee operations (FAEs)

2-5 weeks (14-35 days)

8,826

9,341

5-10 weeks (36-70 days)

17,893

19,672

10-15 weeks (71-105 days)

16,220

18,992

15 weeks and over (106 days and over)

20,941

27,169

Source: Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), NHS Digital, Activity in English National Health Service Hospitals and English NHS commissioned activity in the independent sector

Notes

  1. Total admissions with eligible time waited information

The total number of eligible admissions includes waiting list, booked admissions and planned (elective) admissions. A waiting list admission is one in which a patient has been admitted electively into hospital from a waiting list, having been given no date of admission at the time a decision to admit was made. Booked admissions are those in which the patient was admitted electively having been given a date at the time it was decided to admit. Planned admissions are usually part of a planned sequence of clinical care determined mainly on clinical criteria, which, for example, could require a series of events, perhaps taking place every three months, six months or annually. A FAE is the first period of admitted patient care under one consultant within one healthcare provider. FAEs are counted against the year or month in which the admission episode finishes. Admissions do not represent the number of patients, as a person may have more than one admission within the period.

  1. Main procedure

The first recorded procedure or intervention in each episode, usually the most resource intensive procedure or intervention performed during the episode. It is appropriate to use main procedure when looking at admission details, (eg time waited), but a more complete count of episodes with a particular procedure is obtained by looking at the main and the secondary procedures.

  1. Secondary procedure

As well as the main procedure, there are up to 23 (11 from 2002-03 to 2006-07 and three prior to 2002-03) secondary procedure fields in HES that show secondary procedures performed on the patient during the episode of care.


Written Question
Orthopaedics
Monday 6th March 2017

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what steps he has taken to reduce waiting times for orthopaedic operations in the last 12 months; and whether waiting times for such operations have reduced in the last 12 months.

Answered by Philip Dunne

NHS England publishes monthly data on referral to treatment waiting times to report performance against the right that patients have to start consultant-led treatment within a maximum of 18 weeks from referral for non-urgent conditions. These data show that average median waiting times for patients on a waiting list to start trauma and orthopaedic treatment in admitted patient or outpatient settings were 7.4 weeks at the end of December 2015 and 8.1 weeks at the end of December 2016.

Maintaining waiting time performance is a key objective in the Government’s Mandate to NHS England for 2016-17. Both NHS England and NHS Improvement are providing support and challenge to National Health Service commissioners and providers to reduce waiting times for hospital treatment.


Written Question
NHS: Procurement
Monday 6th March 2017

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how much of the NHS budget was spent on commissioning private providers in each of the last five years.

Answered by Philip Dunne

The requested information is supplied in the following table:

2011/12

2012/13

2013/14

2014/15

2015/16

£ million

£ million

£ million

£ million

£ million

Total commissioner spend on independent sector

5,320

5,669

6,467

8,067

8,722

Total National Health Service revenue expenditure

100,266

102,570

106,495

110,554

114,730

Spend on independent sector as a percentage of total NHS revenue spend

5.3%

5.5%

6.1%

7.3%

7.6%


Written Question
Nurses: Training
Monday 5th December 2016

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what estimate he has made of the number of nursing students who will apply for student finance for courses starting in January 2017.

Answered by Philip Dunne

Under the existing NHS Bursary scheme which eligible pre-registration healthcare students can access for courses that start before 1 August 2017, the NHS Business Services Authority estimate the number of nursing students applying for funding for courses starting in January 2017 will be in the range of 1,300 to 1,350.


Speech in Commons Chamber - Tue 15 Nov 2016
Oral Answers to Questions

Speech Link

View all Tom Blenkinsop (Lab - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland) contributions to the debate on: Oral Answers to Questions

Speech in Commons Chamber - Tue 15 Nov 2016
Oral Answers to Questions

Speech Link

View all Tom Blenkinsop (Lab - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland) contributions to the debate on: Oral Answers to Questions

Speech in Commons Chamber - Mon 31 Oct 2016
NHS Funding

Speech Link

View all Tom Blenkinsop (Lab - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland) contributions to the debate on: NHS Funding

Written Question
General Practitioners
Friday 28th October 2016

Asked by: Tom Blenkinsop (Labour - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, what information his Department holds on the average travel distance to GP services for patients in (a) England, (b) the North East, (c) Redcar and Cleveland, (d) Middlesbrough and (e) Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland constituency.

Answered by David Mowat

Information on average travel distance to general practice services for patients is not collected by the Department or by NHS England.