The Chronicle

NHS crisis now worst on record

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WAITING time targets in Accident and Emergency department­s have hit their lowest level in 14 years, with patients “dying prematurel­y” in their corridors before they are seen.

A letter from the heads of more than 60 A&E department­s in England and Wales to Theresa May has warned that the “current level of safety compromise is at times intolerabl­e,” as the winter months put the NHS under further strain.

It comes as official figures released show the NHS ended the year with the same A&E waiting time performanc­e level in December – 85.1% – as at the start of the year, equalling January’s record low and the worst result since the target was introduced in 2004.

More than 5,000 people were forced to wait more than an hour to be seen in emergency department­s in England in the first week of the year, while more than 16,600 people had to wait more than half an hour, the NHS England statistics show.

Staff have been faced with rising numbers of flu cases and respirator­y illness, with 48 flu-related deaths in England so far this winter. The letter, leaked to the Health Service Journal, signed by consultant­s in charge of emergency department­s in 68 acute hospitals across England and Wales, acknowledg­ed the best efforts of staff, trusts and clinical commission­ing groups.

But it adds: “The facts remain, however, that the NHS is severely and chronicall­y underfunde­d.”

“Thousands of patients are waiting in ambulances for hours as the hospitals lack adequate space,” they wrote.

“Some of our own personal experience­s range from over 120 patients a day managed in corridors, some dying prematurel­y.”

Answering questions after a speech in south London yesterday, Mrs May said flu was putting extra pressure on services. “As we know, every year and winter the National Health Service comes under additional pressure, and we’ve seen the extra pressures that the NHS has come under this year,” she said.

“We have seen in recent days an increase in the number of people presenting at Accident and Emergency from flu.”

The latest figures from Public Health England show the number of flu patients admitted to hospital were two-and-a-half times higher than at the same time last year.

NHS data also shows a spike in the number of bed closures due to norovirus or diarrhoea and vomiting from an average of 731 beds to 944 beds closed per day.

An NHS England spokesman said there had been a “marked increase” in norovirus in recent weeks and the number of cases are now above the five-year average for this week.

The Royal College of Surgeons said it was “disappoint­ing” that just 77.3% of patients at major A&E department­s were treated within four hours, worse than in December 2016 when 79.3% of patients were seen.

 ??  ?? Ambulances outside an A&E department
Ambulances outside an A&E department

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