Mentions:
1: Nigel Huddleston (Con - Mid Worcestershire) ordered to stand part of the Bill.Clause 15 ordered to stand part of the Bill.Clause 16Increase in theatre - Speech Link
2: Nigel Huddleston (Con - Mid Worcestershire) The orchestra, theatre, and museums and galleries exhibition tax reliefs have had rates of 45% for non-touring - Speech Link
3: James Murray (LAB - Ealing North) As the Minister has set out, from 1 April 2025 the rates of theatre tax relief, orchestra tax relief, - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: None on nursing and midwifery support roles and on AHP support roles, including radiography and access-to-theatre - Speech Link
May. 21 2024
Source Page: Children at heart of D-Day 80 with ultimate history lessonFound: inspired by the performance ‘We’re here because we’re here,’ created by the artist Jeremy Deller and theatre
Correspondence May. 20 2024
Committee: Public Accounts CommitteeFound: operational enhancements in provider organisations, which has enabled improvements day case rates, theatre
May. 20 2024
Source Page: Treasury Minutes – May 2024Found: provided by NATO allies, but also through allies in other groupings and beyond the Euro -Atlantic Theatre
May. 20 2024
Source Page: Treasury Minutes – May 2024Found: provided by NATO allies, but also through allies in other groupings and beyond the Euro -Atlantic Theatre
May. 20 2024
Source Page: The NATO Meritorious Service Medal (NATO MSM) – Eligibility Criteria for Ministry of Defence employeesFound: MOD Civilians, awarded the NATO MSM for meritorious operational service in a recognised operational theatre
May. 20 2024
Source Page: The NATO Meritorious Service Medal (NATO MSM) – Eligibility Criteria for Ministry of Defence employeesFound: MOD Civilians, awarded the NATO MSM for meritorious operational service in a recognised operational theatre
Asked by: Damien Moore (Conservative - Southport)
Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:
To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, what steps her Department has taken to support (a) small and (b) independent theatres.
Answered by Julia Lopez - Minister of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology)
His Majesty’s Government is committed to supporting the arts and cultural sector, including theatres. This is primarily through the Arts Council England whose funding for National Portfolio Organisations has increased to £444.6 million per annum, funding a record 985 organisations, including 214 new organisations outside of London.
Arts Council England invests in nearly 200 theatres or theatre companies that produce, commission, and present theatre, in addition to arts centres, festivals and outdoor theatre companies. These range from large theatres in cities - Liverpool Theatres, Manchester Royal Exchange, Sheffield Theatres - to smaller theatres and theatre companies often with a particular specialism, such as theatre for children, theatre with a disability focus, theatre companies that co-create with different communities or theatre companies that are designed to tour. Overall investment in theatre has increased through the current round of the Arts Council’s National Portfolio programme – both in terms of the number of organisations supported, and the volume of funding which is now more than £110 million per annum.
A number of theatres are also regularly supported through the Arts Council’s open access National Lottery Project Grants programme which has a budget of £116.8 million a year. This is a rolling programme and is open to artists and companies across the country.
Asked by: David Davis (Conservative - Haltemprice and Howden)
Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:
To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what data sets will flow into the Federated Data Platform; and what her planned timetable is for each of those data sets to be (a) visible and (b) in use on the Federated Data Platform by participating hospital trusts.
Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)
The NHS Federated Data Platform will deliver measurable improvements for patients. It will allow people to be discharged quicker, and for waiting lists to be shortened, through making better use of data.
It will securely bring together information already available to trusts, in hospital health records, waiting lists, and theatre and staff rosters, to better manage patient care. Each NHS organisation will be the data controller for their instance of the platform. Data will always remain under the full control and protection of the NHS and is only visible to approved users.
The NHS Federated Data Platform will provide trusts and integrated care boards, on behalf of local integrated care systems, with a set of core capabilities and nationally developed products, to support five key National Health Service priorities: elective recovery; care-co-ordination; vaccination and immunisation; population health management; and supply chain management.
A suite of products will sit under each of the use cases. A product is a software solution to address a particular NHS need, for example a patient discharge product which brings together data to help support discharge teams in hospitals in getting patients the right care in the right place. As each product is developed or transitioned to the NHS Federated Data Platform, a privacy notice will be published, setting out the data that will be utilised within the product. These are available at the following link:https://www.england.nhs.uk/contact-us/privacy-notice/how-we-use-your-information/nhs-federated-data-platform-privacy-notice/fdp-products-and-product-privacy-notices/
The NHS Federated Data Platform is being implemented in phases, with the first phase, from March to July 2024, being a transition of existing National Data Platform products to the national instance of the NHS Federated Data Platform, and the transition of 44 pilot sites to local instances. The second phase, from May 2024 to March 2027 and following the successful transition phase, is the rollout of instances of the platform to new trusts and integrated care boards. Once trusts and boards have their local instance of the platform, they can choose to use any of the nationally commissioned products, and develop new or additional products locally, to address local issues. This is when the data will become visible to approved users.