HC Deb 16 December 1996 vol 287 cc458-9W
Mr. Chris Smith

To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many cases of(a) tuberculosis, (b) scurvy and (c) rickets were reported (i) nationally and (ii) in each region in each year region in each year since 1980. [8806]

Mr. Horam

The numbers of notifications of tuberculosis to the Office for National Statistics for 1980 and provisional figures for 1995 are given in the table. Figures for the intervening years are given by standard region in table 5 of the annual publications "Series MB2 Communicable Disease Statistics", copies of which are available in the Library. Changes in the methods for recording numbers of notifications mean that total notification figures for 1980 and 1981 include cases of chemoprophylaxis but from 1982 totals excludes chemoprophylaxis are given. Cases of tuberculosis chemoprophylaxis are not cases of actual tuberculosis and most are therefore not notified. There was 458 cases of chemoprophylaxis in 1995.

TB notifications
Standard region 1980 (including chemoprophylaxis) Provisional figures for 1995 (excluding chemoprophylaxis)
North 486 194
Yorkshire and 884 597
Humberside
East Midlands 625 413
East Anglia 146 80
South East 3,767 2,656
South West 355 202
West Midlands 1,164 654
North West 1,325 630
Wales 390 180
England and Wales1 9,142 5,606
1 Excluding Port Health Authorities.

Data are not collected centrally on scurvy or rickets. National diet and nutrition surveys since 1980 do not show any evidence of the vitamin C deficiency which causes scurvy in the general population. There are occasional reports of rickets in young children, caused by vitamin D deficiency from insufficient exposure to sunlight. The Committee on Medical Aspects of Food and Nutrition Policy has established an expert sub-group on the nutritional aspects of bone health which is considering this.