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  • 2017-02-27 (xsd:date)
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  • Are there more nurses on our wards? (en)
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  • There are over 13,300 more nurses on our wards since May 2010. This isn’t substantiated by the available data. We don’t have figures specifically for the total number of nurses on hospital wards. The claim refers to figures just for nurses working in ‘general care’ with adults, which misses out some nurses in children’s and mental health services who also work on wards. There are ... over 13,300 more nurses on our wards since May 2010 Department of Health, quoted on February 19 2017 More than 13,300 more nurses are working on our wards today than in May 2010 Philip Dunne, 30 January 2017 The government’s claims aren’t about all nurses: they’re quoting the number of nurses who work with adults in acute, elderly and general services and calling those nurses on our wards. But the measure it’s using still excludes some kinds of nurse who will work on wards, like children’s nurses and those who work in mental health. We don’t have figures for the number of nurses on all hospital wards specifically. Stay informed Be first in line for the facts – get our free weekly email Subscribe The Department of Health pointed Full Fact to figures specifically for nurses working with adults in acute, elderly and general services to back up its claim. That’s a hugely wide-ranging set of services—from those who work in A&E to those in intensive care—and accounts for the majority of nurses who work in English hospitals and Clinical Commissioning Groups. But it excludes children’s nurses, those who work in mental health, those who work in maternity, and those who work in community health or as health visitors. Excluding some of those is fair enough provided you noticed that the government is talking about nurses on our wards. You probably wouldn’t include nurses who work in the community or health visitors, for example. But there will be children’s, maternity and mental health nurses who work on wards too, which means the focus on those working in adult general services is quite selective. This matters, because the changes since 2010 look different depending on which types of nurse you’re looking at. The government’s comparison isn’t a fair one: it’s comparing May 2010 to the figures from autumn last year. The problem with doing that is nurse numbers always increase a lot in November as newly-qualified nurses enter the workforce. That said, this doesn’t affect the headline claim by much in this particular case: comparing November 2016 with November 2010 would make the change 13,000. Comparing November to November again, the overall full-time equivalent number of nurses and health visitors working in hospital trusts and CCGs in England has risen by about 6,000 since 2010. Behind that figure, there are rises in some kinds of nursing and falls in others. The bulk of nurses who work with adults in general services is up by about 13,000 —that’s the figure the government is highlighting. Children’s nurses are also up by over 6,000 and health visitors by over 1,000. On the flipside, community health nurses are down by over 5,000, mental health nurses are down by over 4,000 and nurses who work in maternity are also down by around 4,000. It’s not possible to know exactly which nurses you’d see working on wards in these categories. If you included children’s, maternity and mental health nurses along with the adult general nurses, the rise would be around 11,000, for example. So there’s still reason to think that nurses ‘on wards’ could be up by a similar order of magnitude to what the government is claiming, but we don’t yet have figures to make the picture clearer. (en)
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