Loughborough Echo

Waiting times at A&E in spotlight

- CLAIRE MILLER

A THIRD of patients waited more than four hours in a Leicesters­hire A&E in March.

The latest NHS figures show the winter crisis is continuing, with just 66.9 per cent of patients waiting less than four hours from arrival to admission, discharge or transfer in major A&Es run by University Hospitals Leicesters­hire.

For all A&Es and emergency care run by the trust, 69.7 per cent of patients waited less than four hours, the trust’s worst performanc­e since the measure began to be recorded on a monthly basis in June 2015.

Currently the agreed A&E recovery plan is for the majority of NHS trusts to be hitting the 95 per cent A&E waiting time target by March 2019.

Across England, in March, just 86.4 per cent of patients waited less than four hours in A&E from arrival to discharge, admission or transfer, the worst performanc­e since records began in August 2010.

Nearly a quarter of patients in major A&Es, 23.6 per cent, waited over four hours, with 76.4 per cent waiting less than four hours, also a record poor performanc­e, with the number of patients spending more than four hours in this type of A&E topping 300,000 for the first time.

Performanc­e has deteriorat­ed dramatical­ly from last March, when 90 per cent of patients waited less than four hours in all A&Es and 85.1 per cent waited less than four hours in major A&Es. The target is 95 per cent.

The BMA said the figures showed the ‘winter crisis has been replaced by a year-round crisis.

Dr Chaand Nagpaul, BMA council chair, said: “This is unacceptab­le and simply cannot become the new normal for the NHS. The government’s approach of cash top-ups and short-term fixes will no longer do

“Given the Prime Minister’s recent pledge for a long-term funding plan for the NHS, we need the government to urgently translate this into tangible action with new investment. Failure to do so will undermine the delivery of safe, high quality and timely patient care.”

President of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, Dr Taj Hassan, said patients were continuing to pay the price of years of underresou­rcing.

He said: “Recent comments from the Government about an increase in funding are very welcome, yet it is disappoint­ing that we have had to get to this point for any meaningful action to even be considered.

“The pattern of decline has been evident for years and we, among others, have repeatedly pointed to it along with solutions to the worsening problems facing our department­s and health service.

“Yet warnings have gone unheeded. This should be the final wake-up call for decision makers and ministers. Patients are getting sicker and we do not have enough staff or beds to be able to treat them in a timely manner, and with the dignity they deserve.

“The cries for help from the sector should’ve been enough to elicit change. The evidence that change is needed is plain for all to see but has continuall­y been ignored by those that can do something about it.”

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Accident and Emergency

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