§ Mr. Pendryasked the Prime Minister if she will provide figures for each year since 1979 for the numbers of men and women employed in the National Health Service in the United Kingdom in each main occupational group.
§ The Prime MinisterThe following table gives the available figures.
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§ Mr. Pendryasked the Prime Minister if she will provide figures for each year since 1979 for the number of people employed by the National Health Service, broken down by full-time and part-time employees in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
NHS directly employed staff*† as at 30 September Numbers 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 ‡1984 England Whole time║ 571,900 584,700 611,000 617,400 617,200 611,000 Part time║ 339,700 352,200 353,000 354,400 352,800 348,200 All staff 913,500 938,800 965,800 973,700 971,900 959,200 Scotland Whole time 87,800 89,500 92,600 93,300 93,700 92,700 Part time 49,200 49,700 51,100 52,300 52,300 52,500 All staff 137,000 139,300 143,700 145,600 146,000 145,200 Wales Whole time 38,300 39,300 40,600 41,500 41,500 41,400 Part time 22,500 23,300 23,600 24,200 23,900 23,400 All staff 60,700 62,600 64,200 65,700 65,400 64,800 Northern Ireland║ Whole time 34,600 35,700 37,000 37,800 38,100 • Part time 26,200 26,900 28,500 29,200 29,200 • All staff 60,800 62,600 65,400 67,000 67,300 • * Excludes agency staff, hospital practitioners, part-time medical officers (clinical assistants), general medical practitioners participating in hospital staff funds, staff of special hospitals and occasional sessional staff in the community health services. Includes locums. † Figures are independently rounded to nearest 100. Because of rounding the sum of the component figures may not equal the total. ‡ Provisional. ║ Excludes locums as full-time/part-time split for this group is not available for England. ¶ Includes personal social services staff as these cannot be separately identified. • 1984 figures not available for Northern Ireland.