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Hospital Admissions

Mr. Paice: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many people in (a) South East Cambridgeshire, (b) Cambridgeshire and (c) England were admitted to hospital in each of the last five years as a result of the effects of (a) hot and (b) cold weather. [88929]

Andy Burnham: The information requested is not available centrally.

Hospital Art

Steve Webb: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how much was spent on hospital art in each of the last five years (a) in total and (b) broken down by region. [89084]

Andy Burnham: Since 2002-03, information has been provided annually by national health service trusts on the total amount invested in art and art projects. This information is provided in the following table and shows the total spend on labour, materials and resources on arts and arts projects by strategic health authority (SHA) area as configured at 31 March 2006.

Data for 2003-04 and before was provided as part of a mandatory data set. From 2004-05, data has been provided by trusts on a voluntary basis as part of the initiative to reduce bureaucracy in the NHS.

Approximately 50 per cent. of the expenditure in each year was funded by sources external to the NHS, including charities.

The data provided has not been amended centrally and the accuracy of this data is the responsibility of the provider organisation.


4 Sep 2006 : Column 2109W
£
Strategic health authority 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06

Avon, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire

424,863

468,829

126,804

233,153

Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire

2,500

2,500

5,600

4,235

Birmingham and The Black Country

181,248

230,922

317,633

103,970

Cheshire and Merseyside

30,195

36,539

364,534

43,650

County Durham and Tees Valley

449,556

369,914

35,000

125,900

Cumbria and Lancashire

70,905

105,887

18,018

103,500

Dorset and Somerset

219,690

229,747

52,675

22,912

Essex

44,420

121,855

123,090

33,921

Greater Manchester

369,608

266,693

843,983

652,235

Hampshire and Isle of Wight

373,497

264,369

154,620

Kent and Medway

29,500

40,000

5,000

7,300

Leicestershire, Northamptonshire and Rutland

5,500

3,000

107,971

Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire

164,680

153,688

177,833

117,270

North and East Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire

31,197

50,726

34,566

143,082

North Central London

302,230

97,000

20,000

56,825

North East London

245,381

335,077

358,145

211,339

North West London

483,309

481,615

255,271

116,826

Northumberland, Tyne and Wear

270,181

248,000

196,080

374,582

Shropshire and Staffordshire

50,036

51,569

11,000

204,280

South East London

625,355

434,314

197,240

91,737

South West London

217,900

136,400

85,638

146,780

South West Peninsular

226,806

84,264

37,335

69,487

South Yorkshire

53,460

59,264

20,899

82,560

Surrey and Sussex

330,702

160,289

309,131

47,222

Thames Valley

83,588

62,594

146,171

185,677

Trent

25,607

58,400

44,539

217,695

West Midlands South

30,800

20,700

65,000

251,200

West Yorkshire

243,660

142,568

122,453

355,874

Total for England

5,586,374

4,716,723

4,128,258

4,111,183


Hospital Building

Mr. Lansley: To ask the Secretary of State for Health pursuant to the answer of 27 June 2006, Official Report, column 328W, on hospital building, if she will republish the data with the threshold value defined as (a) £25 million and (b) £50 million at 2006-07 prices. [83930]

Andy Burnham: A copy of the full list of operational hospital building projects given the go ahead since January 1980 with values over £29.7 million has been placed in the Library (in line with the recent uplift of the £50 million threshold to a 2006-07 price basis of £58.6 million, the value of a £25 million scheme in 1999-2000 is today worth £29.7 million).

Hospital Expenditure

Mr. Godsiff: To ask the Secretary of State for Health what the (a) availability component of the unitary charge and (b) capital charges were as a proportion of total hospital expenditure in each hospital in each of the last three years. [86672]

Andy Burnham: I refer my hon. Friend to the reply given on 5 June 2006, Official Report, column 384W, with regard to the availability component of the unitary charge. The table placed in the Library gives details of unitary payments for each private finance initiative scheme which has become operational over the last five years (the table shows what the percentage of these payments are against the trusts' annual turnover as opposed to expenditure). Unitary payments include the costs for hard and soft facilities management services as well as for construction and financing. It is not possible to separately identify costs attributable only to the non-services element of the contract as the availability component includes costs attributable to providing hard facilities management services.

Information on capital charges as a proportion of national health service trusts’ annual expenditure in each of the last three years has been placed in the Library.


4 Sep 2006 : Column 2110W

Hospital Food

Mr. Burstow: To ask the Secretary of State for Health (1) what estimate she has made of the average amount spent on hospital food per patient per day in 2005-06; and whether a central assessment has been made of variation in spending in each region; [88516]

(2) what proportion of total patient main meals in hospitals were represented by untouched meals in 2005-06. [88517]

Andy Burnham: For 2005-06, data provided by the national health service shows that the average amount spent per patient meal was £2.65.

No central assessment is made of spending on main meals in different regions. However, performance indicators on this and related areas are available to all trusts through the estates return information collection system to support local monitoring and decision-making.

Data on untouched meals forms part of a wider question on untouched/unserved meals. This includes food delivered to the ward and not served, for example because a patient has gone home, as well as that served but not eaten. For 2005-06, the percentage of untouched/unserved meals was 10.14 per cent.

The data provided has not been amended centrally and the accuracy of this data is the responsibility of the provider organisation.

Hospital-acquired Infections

Mr. Boswell: To ask the Secretary of State for Health what assessment her Department has made of research on the possible link between the level of patient harm and negative healthcare outcomes and the number of beds in wards. [85166]

Andy Burnham: The research that the Department has commissioned into in-patient accommodation is not yet complete and therefore no final assessment has been made.

Hospitals (Cornwall)

Andrew George: To ask the Secretary of State for Health if she will ensure that the next edition of ‘Choosing Your Hospital’ for the West and Central Cornwall primary care trusts includes full descriptions of each of the three hospitals within the Royal Cornwall Hospitals' Trust including their records for cases of (a) MRSA and (b) inpatient waits. [87660]

Mr. Ivan Lewis: It is expected that the next edition of the ‘Choosing Your Hospital’ booklet will include descriptions of each hospital within a hospital trust as well as performance indicators. The performance indicators in the booklet are likely to include information on meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia reports and waiting times. Performance indicators will be based on Healthcare Commission information.

Immunisation

Mr. Stephen O'Brien: To ask the Secretary of State for Health if she will ensure that all those due for
4 Sep 2006 : Column 2111W
immunisation receive that immunisation in the next two months. [88135]

Caroline Flint: Children are currently offered vaccinations according to the following schedule:

When to immunise What is given How it is given

Two, three and four months old

Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), polio and Hib (DTaP/IPV/Hib)

One injection

MenC

One injection

Around 13 months old

Measles, mumps and rubella (MMR)

One injection

Three years and four months to five years old

Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and polio (dTaP/IPV or DTaP/IPV)

One injection

Measles, mumps and rubella (MMR)

One injection

13 to 18 years old

Diphtheria, tetanus, polio (Td/IPV)

One injection


Pneumococcal vaccine will be added to the routine schedule from 4 September 2006.


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