Oral Answers to Questions

Annette Brooke Excerpts
Tuesday 7th December 2010

(13 years, 5 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Simon Burns Portrait Mr Burns
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I can reassure my hon. Friend. She is absolutely right that the winter period and harsh weather impose extra costs, but I am pleased to tell her that partly through winter planning and partly through the experience of past years, hospitals are aware of that. They take into their planning and financial budgeting the possibility of weeks and perhaps longer—depending on the weather—when their costs will increase, and adjust to meet those demands. I am confident that bad weather will not impact on front-line services because of the work that hospitals do to account for it over the 52 weeks of the year.

Annette Brooke Portrait Annette Brooke (Mid Dorset and North Poole) (LD)
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7. What assessment he has made of the Health Protection Agency’s recent report on the incidence of tuberculosis.

Lord Lansley Portrait The Secretary of State for Health (Mr Andrew Lansley)
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I welcome the Health Protection Agency’s recent report on tuberculosis in the UK. There were 8,286 cases of TB in England in 2009, an increase of 4.3% on 2008. The rise has occurred mainly in people infected in countries where TB is common, who go on to develop active TB disease later in life.

Annette Brooke Portrait Annette Brooke
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I understand that that is a 30-year high. Evidence from New York shows that a co-ordinated approach across the city has made a real impact in controlling TB. How will the Secretary of State ensure that such co-ordination takes place, especially in cities, when GP-led commissioning is introduced?

Lord Lansley Portrait Mr Lansley
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The treatment services for individual patients will be commissioned through GP consortiums, but the identification and preventive work on TB is a public health responsibility. To that extent, I believe that we will be better placed to deal with it in future. Many local authorities—for example, in Birmingham, Manchester or Leeds—will be well placed as cities to respond to any incidence or outbreaks of TB on a preventive basis, using their powers as public health authorities.