HC Deb 24 February 1987 vol 111 c227W
Mr. Ralph Howell

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services how many (a) occupied and (b) unoccupied hospital beds there are in each of the regions of Great Britain.

Mrs. Currie

The requested information is given in the table for regional health authorities in England. A variety of reasons may lead to some beds being unoccupied. These include the need to have beds available for emergencies, unexpectedly early discharges which leave a bed available until the next day and unpredictable admissions (for example, in maternity cases).

The health services information steering group recommended in its first report that bed use data should include all patients using a ward in a 24-hour period and that aggregated bed occupancy statistics should not be used as an indicator of efficient bed use. A more useful measure of bed utilisation is patient throughput per available bed. For instance, in 1985 19.5 in-patient cases were treated per available bed compared with 15.00 in 1979.

Statistics for the rest of Great Britain are a matter for my right hon. and learned Friend the Secretary of State for Scotland and my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Wales.

National Health Service hospitals in England, 1985
Regional/Special Health Authority Average daily number of occupied beds1 Average daily number of available beds not occupied1
Northern 18,900 4,873
Yorkshire 21,061 5,732
Trent 23,075 6,316
East Anglian 9,912 2,622
North West Thames 19,756 4,060
North East Thames 22,734 4,120
South East Thames 19,897 4,400
South West Thames 18,820 3,390
Wessex 14,099 3,555
Oxford 9,984 2,571
South Western 17,605 4,327
West Midlands 26,673 6,435
Mersey 15,465 2,999
North Western 23,630 5,391
Special Health Authorities 2,351 735
England Total 263,962 61,526
1 Bed occupancy figures are based on a midnight count and do not therefore reflect the use of beds by patients who do not stay overnight.