Western Mail

OAP, 99, with bleed on brain died after nine-hour ambulance wait

- MARK SMITH Health correspond­ent mark.smith@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AWOMAN who was just days away from celebratin­g her 100th birthday died after waiting nine hours for an ambulance with a broken hip and bleeding on the brain, her family claims.

The pensioner, who fell and fractured her hip on September 16, 2021, was reportedly on the floor of her Monmouthsh­ire home between 11.20pm and 8.15am the following day before being taken to hospital by paramedics.

Her family claims she then spent hours in a “cold” ambulance outside The Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran before she was eventually admitted into A&E and given a bed at 3.15pm on September 17.

The following Saturday the 99-year-old died of her injuries. Her heartbroke­n daughter said this should never have happened in a 21st-century healthcare system.

The Grange University Hospital, which cost £350m to build, opened its doors for the first time in November 2020, four months ahead of schedule. It centralise­d many critical care and specialist services, including A&E, previously provided at the Royal Gwent Hospital and Nevill Hall Hospital. But ever since its premature opening the emergency department has experience­d a number of major issues.

Aneurin Bevan University Health Board (UHB), which runs the hospital, declared a ‘black alert’ on Tuesday – the highest level of pressure – and told people to stay away from A&E unless they had a life-threatenin­g illness or injury.

The Grange has also had among Wales’ worst emergency department waiting times in February with nearly half (44.3%) of patients spending more than the target time of four hours in A&E before being admitted, transferre­d, or discharged.

“While I cannot fault the care given by the medical staff, as they were unaware of the scale of the problem, how is it possible to spend that much of the taxpayers’ money on a state-of-the-art hospital and not factor in facilities to take sick people inside for comfort and dignity?” said the pensioner’s heartbroke­n daughter. “There is no problem with the quality or quantity of the ambulance service but they are unable to do their job.

“How soul-destroying and boring would it be to spend all your shift waiting outside a hospital when they could be saving the lives of others?

“My mother worked hard and paid tax until the day she died – do you think she deserved the treatment she got?”

The daughter, who wished to remain anonymous, said that she found it incredibly difficult to get hold of anyone at The Grange once she found out her elderly mother had been admitted.

She added: “In that shiny new hospital there is a phone system that’s not fit for purpose as every department I needed to contact didn’t answer. I had to physically go up [to the hospital] to find out what was happening after I was informed she had been admitted.

“There must be some highly-paid person that’s very incompeten­t and needs to start earning their salary and sort the mess out. I think the Covid-19 excuse has worn a bit thin now as that is a small part of the hospital.”

The elderly woman’s ordeal was highlighte­d by Peter Fox MS, of the Welsh Conservati­ves, during Plenary at the Senedd on March 22.

He said: “I want to make clear that this is not a fault of staff, doctors, and nurses but a lack of adequate structures in place which need to finally be addressed by both the health board and the Welsh Government.

“The government and the health board need to get a grip because people deserve better. We shouldn’t have to keep constantly raising these issues in the chamber and finding nothing is being done about it and no improvemen­t.”

In response to Mr Fox’s question Lesley Griffiths MS said: “It was certainly horrific to hear the story about your constituen­t and the minister of health and social services is in the chamber and has heard that.

“I actually think you should write to her about the specific case but the minister will have heard the general point you made both about The Grange Hospital and the ambulance service.”

Sonia Thompson, assistant director of operations at the Welsh Ambulance Service, said: “We would invite the patient’s family to contact us directly via our Putting Things Right team so we can better understand their experience.”

The Welsh Ambulance Service has enlisted the help of 235 Armed Forces personnel from the British Army, Royal Navy, and Royal Air Force who joined the service in October.

But their voluntary support was withdrawn on March 29.

Chief executive of the ambulance service, Jason Killens, added: “We’ve been making preparatio­ns over many months for the withdrawal of the military in order to lessen the impact on patients, which has included the recruitmen­t of 100 emergency medical technician­s who will become operationa­l in May. This will bring the total growth in new frontline posts to over 260 in the last 24 months.

“We’re also doubling the size of the control room’s clinical support desk which means that we can assess more patients – up to 15% – over the phone, which negates the need to send an ambulance.

“Despite the growth in our workforce the reality is that some patients will still wait longer than we would like in the coming weeks while pressures remain across the wider NHS urgent and emergency care system that inhibit our ability to respond.”

Aneurin Bevan UHB said its services remain incredibly busy with people being asked to avoid The Grange University Hospital unless their illness or injury is life-threatenin­g. “We have very few beds available across our hospitals to accommodat­e patients requiring admission. The current situation is being caused by:

Record numbers of very poorly patients needing hospital care;

The difficulty in dischargin­g patients from our hospitals due to staff shortages in health and social care;

High staff sickness absences due to Covid;

The widespread knock-on effects of the Covid pandemic, such as the deteriorat­ion of people’s health.

“If you have a less serious injury then please visit one of our minor injury units in Newport, Abergavenn­y, or Ystrad Mynach.

“If you have a loved one in hospital who is deemed medically fit to be discharged please consider taking them home and caring for them. If your loved one is medically fit to be discharged then hospital is not the best place for them to be – they will recover better at home. If your loved one is medically fit for discharge our staff will contact you to discuss the next steps.”

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