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Commons Chamber
Allergy Guidance for Schools - Tue 21 May 2024
Department for Education

Mentions:
1: Alicia Kearns (Con - Rutland and Melton) Some schools go above and beyond to create an allergy-safe environment, but the lack of an allergy policy - Speech Link
2: Damian Hinds (Con - East Hampshire) allergy policy across Government. - Speech Link


Westminster Hall
School Pupils with Allergies - Thu 30 Nov 2023
Department for Education

Mentions:
1: Jim Shannon (DUP - Strangford) and to train school staff and teachers in allergy awareness and allergy first aid.The wonderful thing - Speech Link
2: Jon Cruddas (Lab - Dagenham and Rainham) As the chair of the all-party group on allergy, I can say with some confidence that the allergy community - Speech Link


Commons Chamber
Assistance Dogs and Pavement Parking
1st reading - Wed 08 May 2024
No Department present

Mentions:
1: Bill Wiggin (Con - North Herefordshire) allergic to dogs—that is an unavoidable fact—but only taxi and minicab drivers can hold exemptions due to allergy - Speech Link


Written Question
Integrated Care Systems: Allergies and Nutrition
Monday 15th April 2024

Asked by: Yasmin Qureshi (Labour - Bolton South East)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, whether she has made an assessment of the potential merits of each Integrated care systems having a (a) specialist allergy nurse and (b) dietitian.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The majority of services for people living with allergies are commissioned locally through integrated care boards (ICBs), which are best placed to commission services according to local need. Specialised allergy services are provided for patients with severe and complex allergic conditions, or those who have common allergic conditions for which conventional management has failed and for whom specified specialist treatments are required. In 2023/24, these services are jointly commissioned by NHS England Specialised Commissioning and the ICBs, in line with the published Specialist Allergy Service Specification.

There is an established Clinical Reference Group (CRG), which is responsible for providing national clinical advice and leadership for specialised immunology and allergy services. The CRG uses its expertise to advise NHS England on the best ways to provide specialised services. This includes developing national standards in the form of service specifications and policies. The CRG commenced a review of the current service specification in May 2023, which is expected to be complete by summer 2024. The outcome of the service specification review will be an updated specification which references up-to-date guidance and takes into account the latest evidence base, to clearly define the standards of care for commissioned specialised services.

To help promote awareness of allergies, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has published guidance on a range of allergy conditions, including food allergy in under 19-year-olds, anaphylaxis, and drug allergy. The NICE promotes its guidance via its website, newsletters, and other media.

To support clinicians in the implementation of clear care pathways, the NICE website has guidance to support diagnosis and treatment of a range of allergy conditions, including how to identify allergies and when to refer to specialist care, and how to ensure allergies are recorded in their medical records.  The NICE website also provides primary care practitioners with access to clinical knowledge summaries outlining the current evidence base and practical guidance on a range of skin conditions.


Written Question
Allergies: Health Services
Monday 15th April 2024

Asked by: Yasmin Qureshi (Labour - Bolton South East)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps her Department is taking to improve allergy awareness in health care settings.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The majority of services for people living with allergies are commissioned locally through integrated care boards (ICBs), which are best placed to commission services according to local need. Specialised allergy services are provided for patients with severe and complex allergic conditions, or those who have common allergic conditions for which conventional management has failed and for whom specified specialist treatments are required. In 2023/24, these services are jointly commissioned by NHS England Specialised Commissioning and the ICBs, in line with the published Specialist Allergy Service Specification.

There is an established Clinical Reference Group (CRG), which is responsible for providing national clinical advice and leadership for specialised immunology and allergy services. The CRG uses its expertise to advise NHS England on the best ways to provide specialised services. This includes developing national standards in the form of service specifications and policies. The CRG commenced a review of the current service specification in May 2023, which is expected to be complete by summer 2024. The outcome of the service specification review will be an updated specification which references up-to-date guidance and takes into account the latest evidence base, to clearly define the standards of care for commissioned specialised services.

To help promote awareness of allergies, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has published guidance on a range of allergy conditions, including food allergy in under 19-year-olds, anaphylaxis, and drug allergy. The NICE promotes its guidance via its website, newsletters, and other media.

To support clinicians in the implementation of clear care pathways, the NICE website has guidance to support diagnosis and treatment of a range of allergy conditions, including how to identify allergies and when to refer to specialist care, and how to ensure allergies are recorded in their medical records.  The NICE website also provides primary care practitioners with access to clinical knowledge summaries outlining the current evidence base and practical guidance on a range of skin conditions.


Commons Chamber
Oral Answers to Questions - Wed 08 May 2024
Wales Office

Mentions:
1: Shailesh Vara (Con - North West Cambridgeshire) The coroner’s inquest has not yet reported, but on average, two children in every class have a food allergy - Speech Link


Scottish Parliament Written Question
S6W-24602
Monday 29th January 2024

Asked by: Kerr, Stephen (Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party - Central Scotland)

Question

To ask the Scottish Government what objectives it set for any funding that it has provided to Allergy UK, formally the British Allergy Foundation, since 2019.

Answered by Minto, Jenni - Minister for Public Health and Women's Health

The Scottish Government has provided no direct funding to Allergy UK, formerly the British Allergy Foundation, since 2019.


Written Question
Allergies
Thursday 21st March 2024

Asked by: Daisy Cooper (Liberal Democrat - St Albans)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, whether the federated data platform will include functionality to enable the creation of a consolidated national allergy register.

Answered by Andrew Stephenson - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The current use cases for the Federated Data Platform (FDP) are:

- elective recovery, to address the backlog of people waiting for appointments or treatments;

- care coordination, to enable the effective coordination of care between local health and care organisations and services, reducing the number of long stays in hospital;

- vaccination and immunisation, to continue to support the vaccination and immunisation of vulnerable people while ensuring fair and equal access and uptake across different communities;

- population health management, to help integrated care systems proactively plan services that meet the needs of their population; and

- supply chain management, to help the National Health Service put resources where they are needed most, and buy smarter so that we get the best value for money.

The creation of a consolidated national allergy register, or identifiable national clinical data registries, is not in the current scope of the FDP, which will not be processing identifiable patient data at a national level. More products will be developed on the FDP throughout the lifecycle of this programme.

The FDP programme has developed a front door process and demand assessment framework which will be used for new requirements coming into the programme. The assessment framework assesses ideas and requests on the basis of their fit to the core FDP objectives and targeted business case outcomes, as well as assessing against the feasibility of successful delivery when considering things like cost, capacity, wider system dependencies, and other factors. In regard to a consolidated national allergy register, we would expect discussions to be held initially within the National Disease Registry Service.

Alongside the FDP, NHS England are investing in platform modernisation, including the Patient Outcomes and Registries Platform (ORP) which is a unified national registry platform integrated into NHS England’s system data infrastructure for improved data security, flow, linkage, and analysis, and faster pace of registry development.

The ORP’s directions cover all outcome registries, patient-reported outcome measures and patient-reported experience measures, and shared decision-making and data collections across a wide range of conditions, including all surgical and interventional procedures in the NHS and independent sector. A national allergy register or registry may be in the scope for the ORP’s coverage.


Written Question
Allergies: Schools
Monday 29th April 2024

Asked by: Alicia Kearns (Conservative - Rutland and Melton)

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, whether she has made a recent assessment of the adequacy of allergy guidance in schools.

Answered by Damian Hinds - Minister of State (Education)

It is vital children with allergies are safe in schools.

Statutory guidance makes clear schools should ensure they are aware of pupils with medical conditions, including allergies, and have policies in place to ensure these are well-managed.

The department recently reminded schools of legal duties and highlighted the Schools Allergy Code, which is available online at: http://www.schoolsallergycode.com/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery.


Departmental Publication (Transparency)
Ministry of Defence

Feb. 27 2024

Source Page: FOI responses published by MOD: week commencing 26 February 2024
Document: Number of personnel currently serving in the Royal Navy (PDF)

Found: number of personnel both male and female who currently serve in the Royal Navy 2021 and have a nut allergy