Grimsby Telegraph

100 people stuck in our local hospitals each night unnecessar­ily

BED-BLOCKING CRISIS CONTINUES

- By IVAN MORRIS POXTON ivan.morrispoxt­on@reachplc.com @MoPo97

THERE was an average of 100 people a day y stuck in hospitals overnight in Northern Lincolnshi­re and Goole NHS Foundation Trust t (NLAG) in October who didn’t need to be there.

NLAG’s chief operating officer has said staff f are working “incredibly hard” to get patients fit to leave hospital out, but this is not always possible. Improvemen­ts have been made though to speed up discharges, including consultant ward rounds at weekends and a sevenday escalation process to address issues causing delayed discharge.

The latest monthly figures published last week by NHS England indicate the level of bed-blocking in the region, where patients who medically could be discharged cannot be. The problem of patient discharge is being experience­d across the country, including in Hull, where over 150 patients are in Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill hospitals despite being well enough to be discharged. In October, there was a cumulative total of 3,110 patients remaining in hospital overnight who no longer met the criteria to reside.

This amounted to an average of 100 patients each night who could have been discharged but NLAG hospitals were unable to. There were also 506 additional bed days of patients who had stayed seven plus days in hospital in the week starting October 24, and 354 additional bed days of patients who had been in hospital for three weeks or more. These are measured weekly on a daily snapshot basis.

In September, the average number of patients bed-blocking overnight was 104, and six months ago the figure was even higher, at 133 for April. “Our staff are working incredibly hard to get patients who are fit to leave hospital home as soon as possible,” said Shaun Stacey, NLAG’s chief operating officer.

“However, despite our best efforts, there will always be reasons why some patients are unable to be discharged. Nobody wants to be in hospital for longer than they have to be, but a significan­t challenge facing hospitals and health care systems across the country is getting people back to where they call home in a timely way, once they’re fit to leave the ward.”

He said that NLAG has been working on improvemen­ts to the discharge process, not just at hospital level but also with community services and social care partners so it is a “whole system approach”. “As part of our ongoing learning, we have run a programme called the Perfect Fortnight, which has, in principle, enabled us as a system to reinforce the best practice around discharge and discharge management, and make early clinical decisions about getting people home when they are ready.

“We have also seen some further success in our performanc­e. For the week ending 30 September, we had 48 patients delayed. For the week ending 18 November, we had 31 patients delayed.”

He also highlighte­d actions taken to speed up and improve the process, including: Weekend consultant ward rounds Move to a fully electronic handover system Creation of a seven day escalation process to address elements delaying discharge

Two integrated hospital discharge hubs, one each for North and North East Lincolnshi­re

The Trust has also brought in an acute frailty assessment service and introduced a seven day Same Day Emergency Care (SDEC) ward. “Work has been undertaken to ensure patients who require support on discharge are supported by the most relevant team in a timely manner, ensuring they have timely access to the services they require to enable them to leave a hospital bed,” Mr Stacey said.

“The use of voluntary sector organisati­ons has also been increased to support timely discharge. Our Single Point of Access (SPA) teams are working with East Midlands Ambulance Service (EMAS) and Yorkshire Ambulance Service (YAS) with the management of patients who have requested an ambulance but where hospital admission is not necessary.

“We are reducing hospital admission. In North Lincolnshi­re, our SPA GP is working with residentia­l care homes, nursing homes and domiciliar­y care agencies in helping to avoid unnecessar­y hospital admissions for patients they are caring for.”

Mr Stacey previously reiterated three weeks ago NLAG’s message to people seeking nonurgent care or unsure if they need more urgent care in northern Lincolnshi­re to avoid going to A&E as their first port of call. Instead, the advice is to call 111, see a GP, go to the local pharmacy or even with minor colds, simply stay at home. While he stressed everyone who goes to A&E will eventually be seen, he warned of very long wait times and that emergency department­s were “struggling but coping”.

Slow ambulance to hospital handover times was identified earlier this week by the head of operations at East Midlands Ambulance Service (EMAS) as a major factor behind missed ambulance response targets. EMAS lost an estimated 13,000 resource hours in August due to handover with hospitals delays.

It is asking patients who are requested by call handlers to make their own way to hospital to try to do so, to relieve pressure. The average wait time for Category 1 incidents in October in the East Midlands, which includes northern Lincolnshi­re, was nine minutes and 38 seconds. Category 1 incidents cover lifethreat­ening injuries and illnesses, including cardiac arrest.

In general and acute hospital beds across NLAG, capacity was filled at 91.6 per cent in October, or 598 of the 653 beds occupied on average.

 ?? IMAGE: DONNA CLIFFORD ?? The Diana, Princess of Wales Hospital in Grimsby. NLAG has seen an average of 100 patients staying overnight despite being medically diagnosed as able to be discharged
IMAGE: DONNA CLIFFORD The Diana, Princess of Wales Hospital in Grimsby. NLAG has seen an average of 100 patients staying overnight despite being medically diagnosed as able to be discharged
 ?? IMAGE: DUNCAN YOUNG/NHS ?? Shaun Stacey, NLAG’s chief operating officer, cited a number of improvemen­ts to speed up the discharge process
IMAGE: DUNCAN YOUNG/NHS Shaun Stacey, NLAG’s chief operating officer, cited a number of improvemen­ts to speed up the discharge process
 ?? IMAGE: JON CORKEN ?? Scunthorpe General Hospital
IMAGE: JON CORKEN Scunthorpe General Hospital

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