HC Deb 31 January 1991 vol 184 c612W
Mr. Ralph Howell

To ask the Secretary of State for Health what is(a) the number of nurses employed in the national health service in each year since 1979 and (b) the average number of NHS occupied hospital beds in each year since 1979 for which figures are available; and if lie will show, in both cases, the percentage change in each year.

Mrs. Virginia Bottomley

The available information is given in the table.

NHS nursing and midwifery staff and average number of available and occupied beds England 1979–1989
Year Nursing and Midwifery staff at 30 September1 Whole-time equivalents2 Percentage change on previous year
1979 3 358,400
1980 3370,100 3.3
1981 391,800 5.9
1982 397,100 1.4
1983 397,100 0.0
1984 397,500 0.1
1985 401,200 0.9
1986 402,700 0.4
1987 404,000 0.3
1988 403,900 -0.0
1989 405,300 0.3
Average number of occupied beds (thousands)
1979 293
1980 289 -1.4
1981 285 -1.4
1982 279 -2.1
1983 276 -1.1
1984 269 -2.5
1985 263 —2.2
1986 254 —3.4
1987-1988 4
1988-1989 4
1989–1990 4
Sources:
Manpower:
Department of Health (SM 13) annual census of NHS non-medical manpower
Beds:
Department of Health (SM 12) returns
SH3. return 1979–1986
KHO3. return 1987–88—1898–90
1 All figures are independently rounded to the nearest hundred (100). Percentages calculated on unrounded figures.
2 Includes agency staff and all qualified nurse and midwives, learners and unqualified nursing staff.
3 The WTE figures prior to 1981 have not been adjusted to reflect the reduction in the standard weekly hours for nurses, from 40 to 37.5 hours per week, which occurred during 1980–81.
4 Information not available centrally beyond 1986.

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