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Written Question
NHS: Finance
Monday 23rd May 2016

Asked by: Norman Lamb (Liberal Democrat - North Norfolk)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health, how much each (a) NHS trust and (b) foundation trust has paid to his Department in repayment of public dividend capital of £25,000 or more provided by his Department in each of the last three years.

Answered by Alistair Burt

Repayments of public dividend capital (PDC), of £25,000 or more, made by National Health Service trusts and foundation trusts to the Department in each of the last three financial years are shown in the tables below.

Table A – NHS Trust PDC repayments

2013/14 £000

2014/15 £000

2015/16 £000

Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust

33,700

37,970

Barnet and Chase Farm Hospitals NHS Trust

8,000

4,000

Barts Health NHS Trust

60,000

15,000

Bedford Hospitals NHS Trust

14,200

300

Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Trust

850

Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust

10,000

23,000

Croydon Health Services NHS Trust

18,677

21,336

Dudley and Walsall Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust

785

Ealing Hospital NHS Trust

4,000

5,000

East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust

5,100

6,000

East Cheshire NHS Trust

200

East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust

3,700

East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust

1,500

East Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust

29,000

16,500

Epsom and St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust

6,000

2,600

George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust

2,500

10,000

Gloucestershire Care Services NHS Trust

1,500

Hinchingbrooke Health Care NHS Trust

8,000

Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust

1,000

Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust

3,400

Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust

4,000

750

Isle of Wight NHS Trust

607

Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust

2,825

Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

29,800

1,000

Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust

50

Lewisham and Greenwich Healthcare NHS Trust

10,500

16,942

6,696

London Ambulance Service NHS Trust

4,500

Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust

16,000

Manchester Mental Health and Social Care NHS Trust

300

Mersey Care NHS Trust

6,000

Mid Essex Hospital Services NHS Trust

6,000

20,000

3,809

Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust

24,000

20,500

5,000

North Bristol NHS Trust

8,500

North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust

31,700

17,000

North Staffordshire Combined Healthcare NHS Trust

350

North West London Hospitals NHS Trust

20,853

25,420

Northampton General Hospital NHS Trust

10,500

Northern Devon Healthcare NHS Trust

2,300

Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust

2,000

Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust

2,500

Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust

9,200

3,300

6,000

Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust

6,200

6,500

1,347

Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Trust

1,500

Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen Hospitals University NHS Trust

25,000

Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust

500

Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust

7,500

16,600

2,500

South West London and St George's Mental Health NHS Trust

3,800

Southport and Ormskirk Hospital NHS Trust

350

St Helens and Knowsley Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

100

Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust

5,500

2,000

3,000

Sussex Community NHS Trust

3,000

1,000

The Leeds Community Healthcare NHS Trust

785

The Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Trust

8,341

18,881

3,000

The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust

3,200

The Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust

2,500

The Shropshire Community Health NHS Trust

900

The Solent NHS Trust

5,000

The Staffordshire and Stoke on Trent Partnership NHS Trust

400

The Wirral Community NHS Trust

397

University Hospitals Of Leicester NHS Trust

377

46,000

University Hospitals of North Midlands

11,700

United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust

14,000

14,000

Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust

2,500

2,400

West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust

28,000

West London Mental Health NHS Trust

600

West Middlesex University NHS Trust

2,000

4,950

Whittington Hospital NHS Trust

8,500

5,600

Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust

34,500

Wye Valley NHS Trust

7,800

12,700

Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust

3,653

310,148

562,399

129,254

Table B – NHS Foundation Trust PDC repayments

2013/14 £000

2014/15 £000

2015/16 £000

Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

16,880

Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

2,800

Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust

450

Bolton NHS Foundation Trust

4,100

Burton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

3,272

Calderstones Partnership NHS Foundation Trust

500

Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust

500

Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

30

159

Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

2,400

Clatterbridge Centre for Oncology NHS Foundation Trust

800

Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust

100

Countess Of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

200

Derby Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

2,100

3,700

Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

600

East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust

700

Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust

3,000

Gateshead Health NHS Foundation Trust

200

Great Ormond Street Hospital For Children NHS Foundation Trust

407

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

8,944

Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

2,000

Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust

18,600

Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

4,990

Humber NHS Foundation Trust

600

James Paget University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

1,500

Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

7,400

6,800

King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

9,400

Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

26

Medway NHS Foundation Trust

25,250

Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust

21,545

Milton Keynes Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

20,436

Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

6,900

Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust

295

Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust

700

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

1,800

6,000

Peterborough and Stamford Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

27,419

800

Royal National Hospital For Rheumatic Diseases NHS Foundation Trust

1,000

Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust

1,000

Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust

400

Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

24,174

South Essex Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust

1,400

South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

1,914

South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

14,400

St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

4,600

Tameside Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

9,007

Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust

500

The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Kings Lynn NHS Foundation Trust

11,800

1,000

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

3,400

The Royal Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

2,300

The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust

700

Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust

2,500

University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust

59

University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust

18,000

Warrington and Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

2,500

1,970

209,632

103,355

.


Written Question
Small Businesses: West Yorkshire
Monday 23rd May 2016

Asked by: Rachel Reeves (Labour - Leeds West)

Question to the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy:

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, how much new funding has been given to SMEs across the West Yorkshire Combined Authority to develop their workforces since the publication of the Long-Term Economic Plan for Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire in February 2015.

Answered by Anna Soubry

The Leeds City Region Skills Service has, to date, supported 620 businesses, with 3,300 pieces of training completed and 1,595 more underway. The value of this support to SMEs is £2.12m.

In 2016/17 the Skills Service is expected to support skills diagnostics for 800 businesses, help 1,100 SMEs to offer apprenticeships and upskill 5,600 employees.

Grants between £500 and £50,000 are available to match business investments in workforce training.


Written Question
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills: Yorkshire and the Humber
Monday 23rd May 2016

Asked by: Rachel Reeves (Labour - Leeds West)

Question to the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy:

To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, what funding his Department has provided for (a) scientific excellence, (b) renewable energy in the Humber, (c) food production in North Yorkshire, (d) advanced manufacturing in South Yorkshire and (e) finance and tech in West Yorkshire since the publication of the Long-Term Economic Plan for Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire in February 2015.

Answered by Anna Soubry

This Government is committed to supporting scientific excellence. That is why in Spending Review 2015 we protected science resource funding from its current level of £4.7 billion per year in real terms for the remainder of the Parliament, and why we are investing in new scientific infrastructure on a record scale, delivering on the £6.9 billion science capital commitment in our manifesto.

The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills is working with universities, cities, local enterprise partnerships, and businesses to map research and innovation strengths through a series of science and innovation audits. As part of this, Sheffield University and the Sheffield City Region have been selected, as part of a wider consortium to take part in the first wave of these audits. Linked to other Northern Powerhouse groups Sheffield will be exploring the potential to develop the global competitiveness of advanced manufacturing in the north of England.

We are committed to supporting long term economic growth across Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire. My department is contributing to the cross-government local growth fund which, over a period of 6 years commencing from April 2015, has awarded £1.202 billion to local enterprise partnerships covering Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire. This funding is helping deliver long term economic growth priorities including renewable energy in the Humber, food and agri-tech in York North Yorkshire and East Riding, and advanced manufacturing in Sheffield City Region. The government is also investing in finance and tech in Leeds City Region, including £3.7m to Leeds in March 2016 for a new city centre digital business incubator facility, and providing £50m for two new agricultural technology centres in North Yorkshire.


Written Question
Economic Growth: Yorkshire and the Humber
Monday 23rd May 2016

Asked by: Rachel Reeves (Labour - Leeds West)

Question to the HM Treasury:

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what progress he has made in increasing the long-term growth rate of Yorkshire to at least the long-term growth rate of the whole of the UK in accordance with the Long-Term Economic Plan for Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire.

Answered by Greg Hands - Minister of State (Department for Business and Trade)

The Office for National Statistics have not yet published an estimate of how the Yorkshire economy has grown following the announcement of the Long Term Economic Plan for Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire in February 2015.


Written Question
Rail North
Monday 25th April 2016

Asked by: Andy McDonald (Labour - Middlesbrough)

Question to the Department for Transport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, who the members are of (a) Rail North and (b) the Rail North Board; and how those members are appointed.

Answered by Andrew Jones

Members of Rail North:

  • Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council
  • Blackpool Borough Council
  • Cheshire East Council
  • Cheshire West & Chester Council
  • City of York Council
  • Cumbria County Council
  • Darlington Borough Council
  • Derbyshire County Council
  • East Riding of Yorkshire Council
  • Greater Manchester Combined Authority
  • Hartlepool Borough Council
  • Hull City Council
  • Lancashire County Council
  • Lincolnshire County Council
  • Liverpool City Region Combined Authority (Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, St Helens, Sefton and Wirral)
  • Middlesbrough Council
  • North East Combined Authority (Durham, Gateshead, Newcastle Upon Tyne, North Tyneside, Northumberland, South Tyneside and Sunderland)
  • North East Lincolnshire Council
  • North Lincolnshire Council
  • North Yorkshire County Council
  • Nottingham City Council
  • Nottinghamshire County Council
  • Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council
  • Sheffield City Region Combined Authority (Barnsley, Doncaster, Rotherham and Sheffield)
  • Staffordshire County Council
  • Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council
  • Stoke-on-Trent City Council
  • Warrington Borough Council
  • West Yorkshire Combined Authority

Rail North Ltd Board Directors are:

  • Bill Dixon (Tees Valley)
  • Chris Metcalf (North Yorkshire)
  • David Brown (Cheshire and the Potteries)
  • Dean Collins (East Midlands)
  • John Fillis (Lancashire and Cumbria)
  • Julie Dore (Sheffield City Region Combined Authority)
  • Keith Wakefield (West Yorkshire Combined Authority)
  • Liam Robinson (Liverpool City Region Combined Authority)
  • Liz Redfern (Humber Authorities)
  • Nick Forbes (North East Combined Authority)
  • Richard Leese (Greater Manchester Combined Authority)

Any Local transport Authority in the North of England area covered by Northern and TransPennine franchises is entitled to be a member of Rail North.

Rail North Board Directors are appointed by the constituent authorities of the sub-areas they represent.

Note that Tees Valley Authorities have recently formed a Combined Authority and will, on formal notification, be represented through that single body in the future.


Written Question
Proceeds of Crime
Friday 26th February 2016

Asked by: Lord Mann (Non-affiliated - Life peer)

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what receipts were received by each police force from the proceeds of crime in 2015.

Answered by John Hayes

More assets were taken off criminals in 2014/15 than ever before. £199 million was recovered, and hundreds of millions more was frozen and put beyond the reach of criminals. The table below shows the total receipts from cash forfeited by each police force, and receipts from confiscation orders in the financial year 1 April 2014-31 March 2015.

The table includes data for England, Wales and Northern Ireland. However, the figures for the Police Service of Northern Ireland are for cash forfeitures only, as under the devolution settlement, all confiscation receipts are retained by Northern Ireland, and the Home Office holds no data.

Police Force

Total receipts from cash forfeiture orders and confiscation orders in the year 2014-15

Avon & Somerset Constabulary

£1,490,611.90

Bedfordshire Police

£1,094,410.68

British Transport Police

£556,348.90

Cambridgeshire Constabulary

£720,660.84

Cheshire Constabulary

£2,484,655.12

City of London Police

£2,555,229.61

Cleveland Police

£556,308.05

Cumbria Constabulary

£1,135,771.58

Derbyshire Constabulary

£676,892.51

Devon & Cornwall Constabulary

£1,398,001.79

Dorset Police

£275,603.19

Durham Constabulary

£739,926.17

Dyfed-Powys Police

£196,955.52

Essex Police

£1,636,232.98

Gloucestershire Constabulary

£1,321,446.18

Greater Manchester Police

£6,823,306.05

Gwent Police

£755,622.39

Hampshire Constabulary

£1,357,509.31

Hertfordshire Constabulary

£1,895,544.77

Humberside Police

£1,009,594.15

Kent Police

£1,710,364.42

Lancashire Constabulary

£2,125,492.14

Leicestershire Constabulary

£1,462,857.28

Lincolnshire Police

£440,109.19

Merseyside Police

£3,971,554.79

Metropolitan Police Service

£23,518,346.51

Norfolk Constabulary

£605,485.18

North Wales Police

£555,579.35

North Yorkshire Police

£395,279.48

Northamptonshire Police

£1,607,162.05

Northumbria Police

£827,194.86

Nottinghamshire Police

£924,929.87

Police Service of Northern Ireland

£521,050.22

South Wales Police

£1,313,813.78

South Yorkshire Police

£1,666,790.98

Staffordshire Police

£1,099,376.89

Suffolk Constabulary

£939,571.40

Surrey Police

£1,081,929.13

Sussex Police

£1,089,285.30

Thames Valley Police

£834,890.14

Warwickshire Police

£263,041.41

West Mercia Constabulary

£698,110.14

West Midlands Police

£4,689,385.89

West Yorkshire Police

£5,062,763.87

Wiltshire Constabulary

£430,894.47


Written Question
Economic Growth: Yorkshire and the Humber
Wednesday 3rd February 2016

Asked by: Craig Whittaker (Conservative - Calder Valley)

Question to the HM Treasury:

To ask Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer, what assessment he has made of the projected growth of the economy in Yorkshire and Humber over the course of this Parliament.

Answered by Greg Hands - Minister of State (Department for Business and Trade)

The government does not publish projected growth forecasts for individual regions of the country. However, last year we published our Long Term Economic Plan for Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire where we detailed our ambition for the region to achieve a long term growth rate to at least that of the whole of the UK. This would increase the size of the Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire economies by an extra £13 billion in real terms by 2030, equivalent to over £2,000 per person.


Written Question
Aerials
Monday 14th December 2015

Asked by: Norman Lamb (Liberal Democrat - North Norfolk)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, what the (a) location is of each mast which has been erected and (b) status is of further masts currently in planning as part of the Mobile Infrastructure Project.

Answered by Lord Vaizey of Didcot

There are 15 live MIP masts as at the end of November 2015. These masts are in the following locations:

  • Grantham and Stamford, Lincolnshire

  • Weaverthorpe, North Yorkshire

  • North Molton, Devon

  • Portesham, West Dorset

  • Roadwater, Somerset

  • Ipswich, Suffolk​

  • Rattlesden, Suffolk

  • Seaton, Cornwall

  • Peakswater, Cornwall

  • Calstock, Cornwall

  • Weston Green, Cambridgeshire

  • Rothwell, Lincolnshire

  • Manaccan, Cornwall

  • Londonderry, Derry and Strabane - Northern Ireland

  • Fermanagh, Fermanagh and Omagh - Northern Ireland

Over 50 other potential mast sites are currently being progressed by our supplier with the aim of delivering as many of these as possible by the project end date of 31 March 2016.


Written Question
Diabetes
Monday 19th October 2015

Asked by: Keith Vaz (Labour - Leicester East)

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 people in each county who have diabetes.

Answered by Jane Ellison

The information on estimates of people in each county who have diabetes is not available in the format requested. The table below shows the estimated number of people with diabetes for upper tier district authorities. The estimates ranges from 5.4% in the City of London, to 10.7% in Brent.


Estimated ranges of people with diabetes for upper tier district authorities for 2014

2014

Number

Prevalence

England

3,279,925

7.5%

Buckinghamshire CC

28,986

7.1%

Cambridgeshire CC

35,215

6.7%

Cumbria CC

33,879

8.0%

Derbyshire CC

48,864

7.6%

Devon CC

52,629

8.1%

Dorset CC

30,060

8.7%

East Sussex CC

37,859

8.6%

Essex CC

87,202

7.2%

Gloucestershire CC

36,877

7.4%

Hampshire CC

77,073

7.1%

Hertfordshire CC

62,079

6.8%

Kent CC

90,195

7.5%

Lancashire CC

76,349

7.8%

Leicestershire CC

40,535

7.4%

Lincolnshire CC

48,338

8.0%

Norfolk CC

59,406

7.9%

Northamptonshire CC

41,475

7.1%

North Yorkshire CC

39,207

7.7%

Nottinghamshire CC

49,494

7.5%

Oxfordshire CC

35,376

6.6%

Somerset CC

36,052

8.0%

Staffordshire CC

52,956

7.6%

Suffolk CC

47,835

7.7%

Surrey CC

62,828

6.8%

Warwickshire CC

34,255

7.5%

West Sussex CC

52,761

7.8%

Worcestershire CC

36,287

7.8%

City of London LB

693

5.4%

Barking and Dagenham LB

9,942

7.5%

Barnet LB

23,493

8.2%

Bexley LB

13,716

7.3%

Brent LB

21,497

10.7%

Bromley LB

18,676

7.2%

Camden LB

12,758

6.1%

Croydon LB

23,737

8.5%

Ealing LB

22,765

8.8%

Enfield LB

19,233

8.2%

Greenwich LB

13,330

7.3%

Hackney LB

13,882

8.1%

Hammersmith and Fulham LB

9,120

6.5%

Haringey LB

14,316

7.7%

Harrow LB

18,567

9.6%

Havering LB

14,746

7.5%

Hillingdon LB

16,509

7.6%

Hounslow LB

16,311

8.3%

Islington LB

10,389

6.3%

Kensington and Chelsea LB

11,515

7.6%

Kingston upon Thames LB

9,119

6.2%

Lambeth LB

16,069

6.6%

Lewisham LB

15,799

7.1%

Merton LB

11,751

6.6%

Newham LB

17,950

10.1%

Redbridge LB

19,326

8.8%

Richmond upon Thames LB

10,345

6.3%

Southwark LB

16,709

6.5%

Sutton LB

11,149

6.9%

Tower Hamlets LB

14,360

7.2%

Waltham Forest LB

14,919

8.5%

Wandsworth LB

14,232

5.8%

Westminster LB

15,354

6.4%

Bolton MD

17,905

8.4%

Bury MD

11,054

7.5%

Manchester MD

27,051

6.5%

Oldham MD

14,368

8.4%

Rochdale MD

13,608

8.4%

Salford MD

13,212

6.9%

Stockport MD

17,225

7.4%

Tameside MD

14,001

7.9%

Trafford MD

12,732

7.2%

Wigan MD

18,785

7.4%

Knowsley MD

9,246

7.7%

Liverpool MD

26,281

7.1%

St Helens MD

11,119

7.6%

Sefton MD

17,851

8.0%

Wirral MD

19,508

7.9%

Barnsley MD

14,456

7.6%

Doncaster MD

18,782

7.9%

Rotherham MD

16,434

7.8%

Sheffield MD

33,060

7.0%

Gateshead MD

12,158

7.6%

Newcastle upon Tyne MD

16,034

6.6%

North Tyneside MD

12,242

7.3%

South Tyneside MD

9,982

7.8%

Sunderland MD

17,552

7.5%

Birmingham MD

72,576

8.8%

Coventry MD

20,609

7.9%

Dudley MD

20,361

8.0%

Sandwell MD

22,244

9.5%

Solihull MD

13,109

7.7%

Walsall MD

18,340

9.0%

Wolverhampton MD

19,090

9.8%

Bradford MD

35,136

8.5%

Calderdale MD

12,987

7.7%

Kirklees MD

27,064

8.1%

Leeds MD

45,596

6.5%

Wakefield MD

20,763

7.6%

Hartlepool UA

5,690

7.6%

Middlesbrough UA

8,791

7.7%

Redcar and Cleveland UA

9,121

8.1%

Stockton-on-Tees UA

11,330

7.1%

Darlington UA

6,314

7.6%

County Durham UA

32,455

7.6%

Northumberland UA

21,048

8.0%

Cheshire East UA

22,235

7.3%

Halton UA

7,168

7.5%

Warrington UA

11,560

7.0%

Cheshire West and Chester UA

19,617

7.2%

Blackburn with Darwen UA

9,525

8.9%

Blackpool UA

9,541

8.4%

Kingston upon Hull UA

15,411

6.8%

East Riding of Yorkshire UA

23,168

7.8%

North East Lincolnshire UA

9,927

7.7%

North Lincolnshire UA

10,872

7.9%

York UA

10,873

6.1%

Derby UA

15,433

7.5%

Leicester UA

24,459

9.5%

Rutland UA

2,379

7.5%

Nottingham UA

16,958

6.4%

Herefordshire County UA

12,831

8.4%

Telford and Wrekin UA

9,834

7.4%

Shropshire UA

19,867

8.0%

Stoke-on-Trent UA

15,358

7.9%

Bath and North East Somerset UA

9,907

6.4%

Bristol UA

23,189

5.9%

North Somerset UA

14,094

7.6%

South Gloucestershire UA

14,422

6.3%

Cornwall UA

37,893

8.1%

Plymouth UA

14,805

6.7%

Torbay UA

9,947

8.6%

Bournemouth UA

10,006

7.1%

Poole UA

9,052

7.6%

Swindon UA

11,443

6.7%

Wiltshire UA

27,724

7.2%

Peterborough UA

10,850

7.6%

Luton UA

12,685

8.2%

Bedford UA

10,228

7.7%

Central Bedfordshire UA

14,494

6.7%

Southend-on-Sea UA

10,646

7.7%

Thurrock UA

8,951

6.7%

Medway UA

14,548

7.0%

Bracknell Forest UA

5,833

6.1%

West Berkshire UA

8,445

6.7%

Reading UA

7,789

6.0%

Slough UA

9,181

8.8%

Windsor and Maidenhead UA

8,256

6.9%

Wokingham UA

8,408

6.1%

Milton Keynes UA

13,397

6.7%

Brighton and Hove UA

13,933

6.3%

Portsmouth UA

10,862

6.1%

Southampton UA

12,622

6.0%

Isle of Wight UA

10,614

8.5%


Source: Yorkshire and Humber Public Health Observatory Diabetes Prevalence Model


Diagnosed diabetes prevalence across the four nations of the United Kingdom are taken from the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) and represents all patients age 17 and older who have been diagnosed with diabetes and included on general practitioner registers.


In 2013/14, QOF showed that there were 3.3 million people aged 17 years and older with diagnosed diabetes with equals 6.2% of this age group. The break down by country can be found in the following table:


Diagnosed diabetes across the four nations of the United Kingdom -2013/14



Number

%

England

2,814,004

6.2%

Wales

177,212

6.9%

Scotland

259,986

5.9%

Northern Ireland

81,867

5.3%

United Kingdom

3,333,069

6.2%


Source: Quality and Outcomes Framework (Health and Social Care Information Centre)


Public Health England’s diabetes prevalence model estimates total diabetes prevalence for England and for all local authorities and clinical commissioning groups in England. The model reflects the prevalence of diabetes (diagnosed and undiagnosed) and adjusts for the age, sex, ethnic group and deprivation pattern of the local population.


The estimated total diabetes prevalence using the diabetes prevalence model is 7.5% in England in 2014.


Written Question
Diabetes
Monday 19th October 2015

Asked by: Keith Vaz (Labour - Leicester East)

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 people (a) diagnosed and (b) currently undiagnosed with diabetes in (i) England, (ii) Wales, (iii) Scotland and (iv) Northern Ireland.

Answered by Jane Ellison

The information on estimates of people in each county who have diabetes is not available in the format requested. The table below shows the estimated number of people with diabetes for upper tier district authorities. The estimates ranges from 5.4% in the City of London, to 10.7% in Brent.


Estimated ranges of people with diabetes for upper tier district authorities for 2014

2014

Number

Prevalence

England

3,279,925

7.5%

Buckinghamshire CC

28,986

7.1%

Cambridgeshire CC

35,215

6.7%

Cumbria CC

33,879

8.0%

Derbyshire CC

48,864

7.6%

Devon CC

52,629

8.1%

Dorset CC

30,060

8.7%

East Sussex CC

37,859

8.6%

Essex CC

87,202

7.2%

Gloucestershire CC

36,877

7.4%

Hampshire CC

77,073

7.1%

Hertfordshire CC

62,079

6.8%

Kent CC

90,195

7.5%

Lancashire CC

76,349

7.8%

Leicestershire CC

40,535

7.4%

Lincolnshire CC

48,338

8.0%

Norfolk CC

59,406

7.9%

Northamptonshire CC

41,475

7.1%

North Yorkshire CC

39,207

7.7%

Nottinghamshire CC

49,494

7.5%

Oxfordshire CC

35,376

6.6%

Somerset CC

36,052

8.0%

Staffordshire CC

52,956

7.6%

Suffolk CC

47,835

7.7%

Surrey CC

62,828

6.8%

Warwickshire CC

34,255

7.5%

West Sussex CC

52,761

7.8%

Worcestershire CC

36,287

7.8%

City of London LB

693

5.4%

Barking and Dagenham LB

9,942

7.5%

Barnet LB

23,493

8.2%

Bexley LB

13,716

7.3%

Brent LB

21,497

10.7%

Bromley LB

18,676

7.2%

Camden LB

12,758

6.1%

Croydon LB

23,737

8.5%

Ealing LB

22,765

8.8%

Enfield LB

19,233

8.2%

Greenwich LB

13,330

7.3%

Hackney LB

13,882

8.1%

Hammersmith and Fulham LB

9,120

6.5%

Haringey LB

14,316

7.7%

Harrow LB

18,567

9.6%

Havering LB

14,746

7.5%

Hillingdon LB

16,509

7.6%

Hounslow LB

16,311

8.3%

Islington LB

10,389

6.3%

Kensington and Chelsea LB

11,515

7.6%

Kingston upon Thames LB

9,119

6.2%

Lambeth LB

16,069

6.6%

Lewisham LB

15,799

7.1%

Merton LB

11,751

6.6%

Newham LB

17,950

10.1%

Redbridge LB

19,326

8.8%

Richmond upon Thames LB

10,345

6.3%

Southwark LB

16,709

6.5%

Sutton LB

11,149

6.9%

Tower Hamlets LB

14,360

7.2%

Waltham Forest LB

14,919

8.5%

Wandsworth LB

14,232

5.8%

Westminster LB

15,354

6.4%

Bolton MD

17,905

8.4%

Bury MD

11,054

7.5%

Manchester MD

27,051

6.5%

Oldham MD

14,368

8.4%

Rochdale MD

13,608

8.4%

Salford MD

13,212

6.9%

Stockport MD

17,225

7.4%

Tameside MD

14,001

7.9%

Trafford MD

12,732

7.2%

Wigan MD

18,785

7.4%

Knowsley MD

9,246

7.7%

Liverpool MD

26,281

7.1%

St Helens MD

11,119

7.6%

Sefton MD

17,851

8.0%

Wirral MD

19,508

7.9%

Barnsley MD

14,456

7.6%

Doncaster MD

18,782

7.9%

Rotherham MD

16,434

7.8%

Sheffield MD

33,060

7.0%

Gateshead MD

12,158

7.6%

Newcastle upon Tyne MD

16,034

6.6%

North Tyneside MD

12,242

7.3%

South Tyneside MD

9,982

7.8%

Sunderland MD

17,552

7.5%

Birmingham MD

72,576

8.8%

Coventry MD

20,609

7.9%

Dudley MD

20,361

8.0%

Sandwell MD

22,244

9.5%

Solihull MD

13,109

7.7%

Walsall MD

18,340

9.0%

Wolverhampton MD

19,090

9.8%

Bradford MD

35,136

8.5%

Calderdale MD

12,987

7.7%

Kirklees MD

27,064

8.1%

Leeds MD

45,596

6.5%

Wakefield MD

20,763

7.6%

Hartlepool UA

5,690

7.6%

Middlesbrough UA

8,791

7.7%

Redcar and Cleveland UA

9,121

8.1%

Stockton-on-Tees UA

11,330

7.1%

Darlington UA

6,314

7.6%

County Durham UA

32,455

7.6%

Northumberland UA

21,048

8.0%

Cheshire East UA

22,235

7.3%

Halton UA

7,168

7.5%

Warrington UA

11,560

7.0%

Cheshire West and Chester UA

19,617

7.2%

Blackburn with Darwen UA

9,525

8.9%

Blackpool UA

9,541

8.4%

Kingston upon Hull UA

15,411

6.8%

East Riding of Yorkshire UA

23,168

7.8%

North East Lincolnshire UA

9,927

7.7%

North Lincolnshire UA

10,872

7.9%

York UA

10,873

6.1%

Derby UA

15,433

7.5%

Leicester UA

24,459

9.5%

Rutland UA

2,379

7.5%

Nottingham UA

16,958

6.4%

Herefordshire County UA

12,831

8.4%

Telford and Wrekin UA

9,834

7.4%

Shropshire UA

19,867

8.0%

Stoke-on-Trent UA

15,358

7.9%

Bath and North East Somerset UA

9,907

6.4%

Bristol UA

23,189

5.9%

North Somerset UA

14,094

7.6%

South Gloucestershire UA

14,422

6.3%

Cornwall UA

37,893

8.1%

Plymouth UA

14,805

6.7%

Torbay UA

9,947

8.6%

Bournemouth UA

10,006

7.1%

Poole UA

9,052

7.6%

Swindon UA

11,443

6.7%

Wiltshire UA

27,724

7.2%

Peterborough UA

10,850

7.6%

Luton UA

12,685

8.2%

Bedford UA

10,228

7.7%

Central Bedfordshire UA

14,494

6.7%

Southend-on-Sea UA

10,646

7.7%

Thurrock UA

8,951

6.7%

Medway UA

14,548

7.0%

Bracknell Forest UA

5,833

6.1%

West Berkshire UA

8,445

6.7%

Reading UA

7,789

6.0%

Slough UA

9,181

8.8%

Windsor and Maidenhead UA

8,256

6.9%

Wokingham UA

8,408

6.1%

Milton Keynes UA

13,397

6.7%

Brighton and Hove UA

13,933

6.3%

Portsmouth UA

10,862

6.1%

Southampton UA

12,622

6.0%

Isle of Wight UA

10,614

8.5%


Source: Yorkshire and Humber Public Health Observatory Diabetes Prevalence Model


Diagnosed diabetes prevalence across the four nations of the United Kingdom are taken from the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF) and represents all patients age 17 and older who have been diagnosed with diabetes and included on general practitioner registers.


In 2013/14, QOF showed that there were 3.3 million people aged 17 years and older with diagnosed diabetes with equals 6.2% of this age group. The break down by country can be found in the following table:


Diagnosed diabetes across the four nations of the United Kingdom -2013/14



Number

%

England

2,814,004

6.2%

Wales

177,212

6.9%

Scotland

259,986

5.9%

Northern Ireland

81,867

5.3%

United Kingdom

3,333,069

6.2%


Source: Quality and Outcomes Framework (Health and Social Care Information Centre)


Public Health England’s diabetes prevalence model estimates total diabetes prevalence for England and for all local authorities and clinical commissioning groups in England. The model reflects the prevalence of diabetes (diagnosed and undiagnosed) and adjusts for the age, sex, ethnic group and deprivation pattern of the local population.


The estimated total diabetes prevalence using the diabetes prevalence model is 7.5% in England in 2014.