Leek Post & Times

A&E waits down – but hospital still set to miss out on funding

Improvemen­t not enough to hit target for cashpot payout

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STAFFORDSH­IRE’S main hospital is getting close to hitting a national target for A&E waits – but is still set to miss out on millions of pounds of performanc­e-related funding.

University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust has been seeing about 70 per cent of A&E patients within four hours in recent weeks, compared to an NHS target of 76 per cent, and up from a low of 56 per cent in December 2022.

NHS England has told all hospital trusts they need to hit the 76 per cent target by the end of March – which UHNM has not achieved since April 2021.

UHNM, which runs the Royal Stoke and County Hospital in Stafford, and the wider Staffordsh-ire NHS is expected to miss out on about £2.9 million of incentive funding, tied to achieving 80 per cent over a threemonth period.

Chief operating officer Simon Evans told a trust board meeting UHNM continued to be one of the most improved hospitals in the country in terms of reducing A&E waits, but admitted that it still had ‘a long way to go’ to hitting the 76 per cent target in March.

During the winter period, the proportion of patients seen within four hours had fallen from 70 per cent in September to 64.2 per cent in January.

But Mr Evans said performanc­e had ‘improved substantia­lly’ since the trust had declared two critical incidents in January and February, when demand on the emergency department had exceeded capacity.

He said: “A recent example, which is of note, is that we’ve had a day where we’ve had zero patients waiting for more than 12 hours in our emergency department. That is something that’s normally occurs on Christmas Day alone, and I’m pleased to say that we’ve had that during the February period. We’re now seeing a consistent reduction in the number people who are waiting for more than 12 hours.

“Neverthele­ss we still have a long way to go to achieve our 76 per cent target in March. We have started very well at the end of February and into March, we are consistent­ly delivering high 60s and low 70s performanc­e now. It’s continuing to improve. Our forecast for the end of March is still set at 76 per cent, and we are still ambitious in terms of wanting to deliver that. We’re probably closer to that than we’ve ever been, certainly in the last 12 months.”

Chief finance officer Mark Oldham told the board no trust in England was on track to hitting the 80 per cent target, meaning a £150 million national incentive pot would go unclaimed. The board heard NHS England was therefore reviewing the criteria.

Non-executive director Gary Crowe said even if UHNM hit the 76 per cent target, this still represente­d ‘poor’ performanc­e.

He said: “While the national progress towards the 76 per cent objective sounds like progress on one level, that still means that even if you hit that target we’ve got a quarter of people not being seen in that time. I think that’s a really poor state of affairs for the country.

“So 76 per cent is not a good outcome compared to what we used to achieve in this country not so long ago.”

 ?? ?? WAITS CUT: The Royal Stoke.
WAITS CUT: The Royal Stoke.

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