Hinckley Times

300 ops cancelled at Leicester hospitals

- CLAIRE MILLER hinckleyti­mes@trinitymir­ror.com

HEALTH bosses say they have cancelled more than 300 operations at Leicester’s hospitals due to a spike in admissions over Christmas.

Pressure on medics at Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester General Hospital and Glenfield Hospital has prompted the NHS trust that runs them to declare it is at Operationa­l Pressures Escalation Level 4 (Opel4), which means it is at the highest level of pressure and indicates there is “increased potential” for patient safety to be at risk.

To cope, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust (UHL) managers called off 302 operation between December 28 and the end of January 2.

A UHL spokeswoma­n said 69 of those procedures were cancelled on the day and the others with a week’ws notice.

Only non-urgent procedures have been cancelled such as hip replacemen­ts, cataract removal and the extraction of wisdom teeth.

The Opel4 status is being reviewed four times a day by UHL and could be lifted at any point. NHS England has said cancer operations and time-critical procedures should go ahead as planned.

It has warned Opel4 should continue until January 31.

Darent Valley Hospital A&E in Kent, Royal Cornwall Hospital and and Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust have all said they have declared Opel4 in the last week.

Head of policy at the Patients Associatio­n John Kell said: “NHS England’s decision to defer elective surgery throughout January and authorise the use of mixed sex wards is a sign of how hard winter pressures are hitting the NHS this year. Combined with regular first-hand reports of worsening conditions in hospitals, including growing numbers of patients being treated on trolleys in corridors, it is clear how badly patients are losing out.

“Ministers must be accountabl­e for this winter’s crisis. The policy decisions that have left the NHS in this position are taken by the Government, and it is ministers who are directly accountabl­e to Parliament, and to patients when they vote at elections.

“It has long been obvious that all but the very mildest winter pressures would stretch the NHS mightily, and so it has proved.

“Objectivel­y, the NHS’s performanc­e and offer to patients are stronger now than they were 15 years ago or more, but the experience­s of patients at times like this do not reflect that.

Shadow health secretary and Leicester South MP Jon Ashworth said: “The NHS is now in a serious crisis.

“We have seen hospital taking to Twitter and Facebook pleading for staff to some in because they are in such dire straights. It’s because of seven or eight years of Tory under-funding.”

University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust’s interim chief operating officer Eileen Doyle said: “We have been extremely busy since Christmas with admission to our hospitals and as a result we have had to cancel some planned operations. We absolutely know that this is frustratin­g and worrying for those people affected and we hate to do it.

“It is not something we do lightly and if we have to cancel an operation it is because we are prioritisi­ng emergency and urgent patients.

“We have to make the decision between ‘life saving’ and not immediatel­y life threatenin­g or routine operations, which is why cancellati­ons only affect patients having planned surgery.

“We will be contacting patients to rebook their surgery as soon as possible and we sincerely apologise for the distress this will have caused patients and their families.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom