HC Deb 18 April 1989 vol 151 cc123-4W
Mr. Austin Mitchell

To ask the Secretary of State for Health what was the source of(a) his statement on 5 December that 1,000 people had been affected by outbreaks of salmonella traced back to eggs and (b) his Department's statement on 6 December that 7,000 cases of salmonella had been so traced.

Mr. Kenneth Clarke

[holding answer 17 February 1989]: My statement on 5 December 1988 at column 19 that

Table A
£ million
Main service provision 1988–89 1989–90 main service provision
Initial cash levels1 Column 1 adjusted to 1989–90 cash levels Initial cash levels1
Column 1 Column 2 Column 3
Northern 735 793 832
Yorkshire 830 894 937
Trent 1,010 1,089 1,147
East Anglian 438 472 497
North West Thames 808 871 913
North East Thames 1,007 1,086 1,137
South East Thames 898 968 1,018
South West Thames 746 804 844
Wessex 615 662 699
Oxford 482 520 558
South Western 732 789 832
West Midlands 1,186 1,278 1,340
Mersey 586 631 664
North Western 1,005 1,083 1,140

up to the end of October there had been 46 reported outbreaks of salmonella food poisoning in England and Wales involving about 1,000 cases

related to cases where the infection was directly attributable to the consumption of eggs. Over the same 10-month period there had been a total of 23,039 salmonella isolations of which 10,544 were salmonella enteritidis phage type 4, the type predominantly associated with chicken and eggs.

My Department has never made any statement on 6 December or at any other time about 7,000 cases being traced.