HC Deb 05 March 1996 vol 273 c157W
Dr. Godman

To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland how many psychiatric beds have closed in each year since 1980–81 in(a) Strathclyde and (b) Scotland. [18049]

Lord James Douglas-Hamilton

Information on the number of beds closed is not centrally available. The pace of change in this sector is directed by patient needs. The organisation of long-stay care and care services in the community are determined by continuous joint assessment of local needs involving health boards and local authorities. The aim is to secure the most effective package of services, both in hospital and in the community, that meet the specific needs of patients and carers.

The table shows the net average available staffed psychiatric beds available as at 31 March from 1981 to the latest available year.

Year Scotland Strathclyde
1981 16,953 8,004
1982 16,765 7,952
1983 16,569 7,852
1984 16,444 7,721
1985 16,463 7,766
1986 16,197 7,567
1987 15,820 7,253
1988 15,508 7,017
1989 14,973 6,791
1990 14,407 6,598
1991 13,927 6,358
1992 13,251 5,951
1993 12,561 5,594
1994 11,727 5,203
1995 11,034 4,881

Notes:

1. Comprises specialities of mental illness, psychogeriatrics, child psychiatry and adolescent psychiatry.

2. Includes beds in joint-user and contractual hospitals. Joint-user hospitals are local authority institutions in which accommodation is made available to health boards in terms of the sixth schedule of the National Assistance Act, 1948. Contractual hospitals are institutions where health boards have customer arrangements with voluntary bodies for the use of beds.

3. Strathclyde information comprises Argyll and Clyde, Ayrshire and Arran, Greater Glasgow and Lanarkshire health board areas.

Source:

Information and Statistics Division, NHS in Scotland.