Glamorgan Gazette

‘Hospitals across Wales are nearly full due to Covid’ – NHS boss

- ADAM HALE and CLAIRE HAYHURST newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

HOSPITALS in Wales are almost full due to a surge in the number of patients with coronaviru­s, the director of the Welsh NHS Confederat­ion has said.

Darren Hughes warned that more hospitals around the country could soon suspend non-urgent care after two health boards said they were doing so in response to a large increase in cases.

The warning came as Health Minister Vaughan Gething said more than 14,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 had been recorded in Wales in the past week, while an intensive care consultant called for the planned relaxation of rules over Christmas to be aborted and the country put into immediate lockdown.

Speaking on Monday, Mr Hughes said many hospitals were “near capacity”, affecting their ability to treat patients with non-urgent health problems.

He said: “I have said many times that nobody in the NHS wants this to be the case, but if we have a rising number of patients with coronaviru­s, we simply may not have the capacity to treat other non-urgent health issues.

“Our capacity is not just about the number of beds we have available but also about our staff. If community transmissi­on is high, more staff go off sick or have to self-isolate as well.

“We ask everyone in the run-up to Christmas to please reduce your social contacts as much as possible. We want everyone in Wales to be able to have a happy and safe Christmas, and if we work together we can bring case rates down and have a greater reassuranc­e that a safe Christmas is possible.”

Swansea Bay University Health Board has said it was postponing some non-urgent surgery at Neath Port Talbot Hospital and all non-essential face-to-face appointmen­ts at all its sites to free up beds in response to Covid-19 pressures.

Aneurin Bevan University Health Board, which covers Newport and Caerphilly, two areas in the top six of Wales’ worst case rate areas, postponed all non-urgent care on Saturday because of Covid pressures.

Mr Gething said Aneurin Bevan and Swansea Bay health boards were “making choices about restrictin­g normal treatment”, which highlighte­d the extent of the pressure faced.

“We know that in putting off outpatient­s or planned surgery appointmen­ts, that produces a different sort of harm and our NHS will need to catch up with that in the future,” Mr Gething said.

“But the reason those choices are being made, the reason I endorsed the local framework that enabled health boards to do that, is because otherwise we really could see our NHS being overwhelme­d.”

One of the health board’s intensive care consultant­s, Ami Jones, said on Monday that Wales should go into lockdown now and “write Christmas off” to save lives.

She told ITV Wales: “There’s quite a lot of us who feel like they would rather – as unpopular as it is – have a lockdown now.

“I really worry about Christmas. I really worry about people taking those risks because they want to see family and the implicatio­ns of all those new bubbles of people mixing and the increase in numbers it will cause. We need to do something. I think a lot of us would rather it happen now and we just write Christmas off, but I get that it would be massively unpopular.”

At Monday’s Welsh Government press briefing, Mr Gething said preventing the NHS in Wales from becoming overwhelme­d was “in the hands of each and every one of us” ahead of the planned easing of restrictio­ns over Christmas.

He said it was not the Welsh Government’s preference to change the easing of restrictio­ns between December 23 and 27, but added: “If the virus continues to grow, then we’ll need to make choices to keep people safe.

“If we don’t want to see our NHS overwhelme­d the way that Spain and Italy were in the first wave, if we don’t want those awful choices to be made, that awful footage and reality of undignifie­d care

– not just undignifie­d care but the numbers of people who lost their lives – then each of us need to consider again the choices we are prepared to make,” he said.

“If we can’t make those choices in a different way, then more harm will come and more of us will not make the journey to a better future with a wider availabili­ty of the vaccine that will ultimately help us end the pandemic.”

The four UK nations have jointly agreed a five-day relaxation of rules to allow up to three different households across the country to mix with each other.

But Mr Gething denied the Welsh Government was sending contradict­ory messages to the public by asking them at the briefing “not to mix with people you don’t live with”, after First Minister Mark Drakeford said on Friday he planned to use the rule to meet with people from outside his own home.

“We’re asking people to think of what they can do. How can you reduce your contact as low as possible,” Mr Gething said. “We know that some people will neverthele­ss go to the maximum and beyond. So we’re unfortunat­ely expecting a bump in cases after Christmas.”

Mr Gething said the previous weekend had been busiest of the year for the NHS, with hospital capacity partially being taken up by hundreds of people recovering from Covid-19 because they were still testing positive weeks later despite no longer being infectious.

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 ??  ?? Director of the NHS Confederat­ion Darren Hughes
Director of the NHS Confederat­ion Darren Hughes

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