Yorkshire Post

Appeal to public over A&E crisis

Chiefs aim to reduce winter pressure

- CLAIRE WILDE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: claire.wilde@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ClaireWild­eYP

HEALTH: managers at Hull Royal Infirmary – where they had to cancel appointmen­ts earlier this year – are urging the public to help ease pressures and prevent a repeat of last winter’s care crisis.

MANAGERS AT one of Yorkshire’s busiest hospitals are urging the public to help ease mounting pressures on resources and prevent a repeat of last winter’s care crisis.

Hull Royal Infirmary was among hospitals across the country which were forced to cancel appointmen­ts earlier this year, with doctors and nurses redeployed to overrun Accident and Emergency department­s.

This year, the hospital is nearly increasing the number of temporary assessment beds at its Emergency Department, from 28 to 52, in an effort to boost capacity through the traditiona­lly busy colder months. The beds are used to accommodat­e patients while medics conduct tests to determine whether they need to be admitted, easing pressure on other wards.

But hospital bosses are also urging the public to do their part to keep the service free for those who need it most, with the trust warning that about half of people who take themselves to its Emergency Care Area, the publicfaci­ng part of the Emergency Department, could have gone elsewhere.

Teresa Cope, the chief operating officer for the Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, said: “We see about 200 patients through that bit of the Emergency Department every day, and we think probably half of these could have been treated somewhere else.”

She urged people to consider visiting a GP, pharmacist or urgent treatment centre or calling NHS 111 before heading to hospital with a minor ailment and warned that anyone turning up at A&E could be in for a wait of many hours before being treated.

“Earache, sore throats, back pain for a couple of weeks, these are the sorts of things we would really want people to go to their GP with, or some sort of walk-in centre,” she said.

“Our sickest patients are prioritise­d as appropriat­e, so people with minor illnesses and minor ailments who could have gone to those other facilities will be waiting longer and that is unfortunat­ely just how we have to manage resources.”

The trust had to cancel routine surgery and some outpatient clinics over an eight-day period earlier this year, following an unpreceden­ted edict from NHS England, under Operation Wintergree­n, for hospitals across the country to postpone non-urgent operations to help ease pressures on the system.

Mrs Cope said each year the trust schedules fewer operations during the winter months, which it would be doing again this year. But she said having to cancel operations once again could always be a possibilit­y.

People with minor ailments will be waiting longer. Teresa Cope, Chief Operating Officer for Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust.

 ?? PICTURE: SIMON HULME ?? BUSY: Hull Royal Infirmary’s emergency department, is making plans to increase capacity this winter, increasing the number of temporary assessment beds from 28 to 52.
PICTURE: SIMON HULME BUSY: Hull Royal Infirmary’s emergency department, is making plans to increase capacity this winter, increasing the number of temporary assessment beds from 28 to 52.

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