The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

A&E doctor hopes TV series will open eyes

- Dr Chris Srinivasan.

An NHS doctor who appears in a new documentar­y series about a hospital A&E unit said he hopes it shows viewers the kind of challenges the department regularly faces.

Dr Chris Srinivasan, who is one of the doctors featured in A&E After Dark filmed at Hull Royal Infirmary, said he hopes the footage will help people realise they might be able to get the care they need elsewhere.

He told the PA news agency: “The staff embraced it (the filming), they wanted to show the public the work they did and help the public understand the challenges that we face in Hull, but all emergency department­s across the country, with the spectrum of problems that we see overnight.

“We also hope that people in the future might choose differentl­y, or when they do come to us they understand the reasons they have to wait and that we can’t necessaril­y see them straight away.”

The series was filmed before the coronaviru­s crisis, and Dr Srinivasan said: “At the time that the series was filmed we were seeing 400 patients a day and at times that was very, very difficult to manage, and we are wanting people really to understand that under certain circumstan­ces they might want to seek help elsewhere, maybe at an urgent care centre or within their GP.

“I think the brand of emergency department, of A&E is so strong that people generally know what they are going to get and sometimes people are better self-caring or seeking help in other ways.

“But at the same time, what we don’t want is for people who have severe life-threatenin­g problems to be at home when actually they really need to be with us.”

He said that during the earlier stages of the pandemic, A&E attendance­s fell but are now rising again and his department is seeing around 300 patients a day.

A&E After Dark is on Channel 5 at 9pm tonight.

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Picture: PA.
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