Even though Andrew Marr was not in the chair after suffering a stroke, the show still went on and a couple of weeks ago the
main guest Ed Miliband (young Wallace) was interviewed by BBCs James Langdale.
During the interview, young Wallace was answering questions
on the NHS and the question of nursing numbers once again raised its ugly head.
As you might expect, young Wallace claimed that thanks to
the Coalition’s planned reorganisation of the NHS there were 4000 less nurses
working in the Health Service than the previous year.
Now on its own that figure sounds dreadful. However it also
reveals how practiced politicians manipulate statistics to add weight to their
own political arguments.
What he didn’t say was this figure of 4000 was 9000 less
than the number of nurses Labour announced was to be slashed if they had been
re-elected in 2010. Official plans at the time showed that Labour Ministers
were not planning to replace large numbers of staff who were to quit over the
next five years.
Had Labour been in charge, the number of qualified nurses
would have slumped by 13,409 - after years of increases under Labour - By 2014,
the total would fall from 329,372 in 2008 to 315,963.
At the time, this revelation was a blow to Labour's election
promise to protect frontline services while reining in public spending.
However, according to the latest NHS official figures, in
2011 the NHS employed 143,836 doctors, 370,327 qualified nursing staff, and
38,214 managers. There are also 1,788 more practice nurses employed by GPs
in 2011 than ten years earlier.
This means that since Labour left office, 40,955 more
nursing staff are working in today’s NHS!
There were 49,982 more NHS nurses in 2011 compared to ten
years earlier, although there has been a drop over the last two years, where
nurses leaving the service in various parts of the country
have not always been replaced.
It’s also interesting to note that the overall NHS net
expenditure has increased from £49.021 billion in 2001/02 to £104.333bn in
2011/12. The planned expenditure for 2012/13 is £108.897bn.
Sort of puts young Wallace’s statement back into context,
doesn’t it?
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