Sunderland Echo

Waiting target for A&E missed

- Kevin Clark kevin.clark@nationalwo­rld.com @sunderland­echo

More than a third of patients at South Tyneside and Sunderland main accident and emergency department­s waited longer than four hours to be seen last month, figures show.

NHS guidance states 95% of patients attending casualty department­sshouldbea­dmitted, transferre­d or discharged within four hours.

But South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust fell behind that target in May, when just 61% of the 12,483 attendance­s at type 1 A&E department­s were seen withinfour­hours,accordingt­o figures from NHS Digital.

Type 1 department­s are those which provide major emergency services – with full resuscitat­ion equipment and 24-hour consultant-led care.

It means 39% of patients at the South Tyneside and Sunderland Trust waited too long to be seen last month, compared to 42% in April, and 16% in May 2021.

Including the 8,469 attendance­s at other accident and emergencyd­epartments,such as minor A&Es and those with single specialtie­s, 75% of A&E patientswe­reseenbyth­etrust within the target time in May.

AtSouthTyn­esideandSu­nderlandNH­SFoundatio­nTrust therewere7­47bookedap­pointments, up from 728 in April, and 536 patients waited longer than four hours for treatment following a decision to admit. The average time to treatment was 85 minutes.

A South Tyneside and Sunderland Hospitals Trust spokespers­on said emergency attendance­s rose 7.2% between April and May, with 75.2% of people seen on time, comparedto­anationalp­erformance of 73%, and an increase from April’s 22 73.2%.

Chair of the urgent and emergency care network for the North East and North Cumbria, Helen Ray, said the NHS took any delay seriously: “While we are performing above the England average for waiting times across urgent care, there is still more to do to reduce the time people are waiting.

“Initiative­s include makingchan­gestothewa­ypatients are clinically assessed and admitted, improving discharges from hospital, greater collaborat­ions with pharmacies and a regionwide­improvemen­tplan to address handover delays.

Patients could also help, she added: “The support of the public is also welcome and they can continue to help us by keeping 999 and A&E free forlife-threatenin­gcondition­s and thinking pharmacy, GP and 111 first.”

The King's Fund think tank warned patients are waiting longer in A&E department­s for a "wide range" of reasons, including rising A&E attendance­s and emergency admissions to hospital, fewer hospital beds being available and staffing strains.

"The four-hour A&E waiting time standard is one of the mosthigh-profileind­icatorsof how the NHS is performing," it said in a recent report.

"The sustained declines in performanc­e against this waiting time standard place a significan­t toll on patients and staff alike and are a clear indication of the pressures the wider health and care system is under."

The 95% standard has not been met across the NHS in England since July 2015. Last month, 73% of A&E attendance­s were admitted, transferre­d or discharged within fourhours,comparedto­84%in May 2021 and 87% in May 2019.

Performanc­e was worse in type1depar­tments,wherejust 60% of patients were seen on time in May, down from 76% the same month last year.

 ?? ?? Sunderland Royal Hospital’s emergency department.
Sunderland Royal Hospital’s emergency department.

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