Runcorn & Widnes Weekly News

A&E winter emergency

- Dr Chaand Nagpaul BMA council chair

NEW analysis from the BMA shows that over one million patients could experience waits of over four hours at emergency department­s this winter and almost a third of a million patients could wait on trolleys to be treated.

The report published today warns that NHS is on track to endure its worst-ever winter as analysis of A&E four hour wait times, A&E admissions and attendance­s, and trolley waits in England suggest that pressures on services look set to skyrocket in the coming months.

Ahead of the upcoming election, the doctors’ union is calling on the next Government to prioritise the NHS as it warns of a ‘perfect storm’ caused by widespread failure to manage patient need over the worst-ever summer, along with staff shortages, a potentiall­y cold winter and bad flu season, as well as the impact of Brexit.

In its manifesto for health launched last week, the BMA is calling for health spending to be increased by at least 4.1 percent each year to get the NHS ‘back on a sustainabl­e footing’ and for the punitive pension tax system, which is driving senior doctors out of the workforce, to be scrapped.

Enough is enough. Right across the health service, trusts and GP practices will be bracing themselves for what looks set to be the worst winter the NHS has ever endured.

Patients should not fear needing hospital care or being able to see their GP, nor should they have to accept that they may spend hours on a trolley in an emergency department, waiting to be treated.

Similarly, staff working in hospitals and GP practices across the country should not be facing the daunting prospect of having to care for those patients in these relentless­ly pressurise­d environmen­ts.

This perfect storm is brewing alongside the upcoming general election and politician­s should be paying close attention to the fall out of failure to invest in and support our health service for over a decade.

Though the need for urgent funding this winter is pressing, this is not just about the short-term fix.

This is about the current, and any future Government, putting the NHS back on a sustainabl­e footing, with capacity to meet the demands on its services.

It is about having a sufficient number of beds and facilities, an adequately staffed workforce that is ready and motivated to meet rising pressures, prioritisi­ng healthcare prevention, and putting patient care back in the focus.

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