HC Deb 13 December 2000 vol 359 cc184-5W
Mr. Viggers

To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many cases of MRSA have been detected in NHS hospitals; what steps including ward closures have been taken to prevent the spread of the infection; and what has been the resulting loss of medical facilities which would otherwise have been available. [141379]

Mr. Denham

The Public Health Laboratory Service (PHLS) compiles aggregate data on numbers of incidents of methicillin resistantStaphylococcus aureus (MRSA) which are voluntarily submitted by trusts for specialist microbiological tests. These are given in the table.

Data on Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemias (blood infections) showing the proportion resistant to methicillin in England and Wales are published quarterly by the PHLS in their Communicable Disease Report, copies of which are available in the Library of the House. More comprehensive information about bacteraemias, including MRSA, will be collected from all acute trusts from 1 April 2001 and data will be published from 1 April 2002.

The other information requested is not held centrally.

incidents of MRSA 1996–1998
1996 1997 1998
Anglia and Oxford 237 297 223
North Thames 539 544 289
North West 176 259 215
Northern and Yorkshire 150 224 202
South and West 206 254 101
South Thames 421 385 220
Trent 99 123 109
West Midlands 121 102 69
Wales 158 176 169
Total 2,107 2,364 1,597

Incidents of MRSA 1999–2000
1999 2000
Eastern 80 30
London 290 100
Northern and Yorkshire 170 40
North West 180 50
South East 170 60
South West 40 10
Trent 100 30
West Midlands 30 30
Wales 130 30
Total 1,190 380

Notes:

1. For 1996 and the first half of 1997 data have been amalgamated to the approximate boundaries of the new Regional Office areas. This allows for comparison with subsequent years.

2. An incident is three or more patients infected or colonised by the same strain of MRSA in the same month from the same hospital.

3. The criteria for submission of isolates of MRSA (and other isolates of staphylococcus aureus) to the PHLS for specialist tests have been revised twice since 1996 (in January 1998 and in January 2000).

4. These revised criteria have led to a fall in the number of incidents of MRSA that were reported to the PHLS.