Manchester Evening News

Hospital worst in country for 12-hour A&E waits

STEPPING HILL ALSO FIFTH FROM BOTTOM FOR NOT MEETING FOUR-HOUR TARGET TO SEE PATIENTS

- By JENNIFER WILLIAMS NEWSDESK@MEN-NEWS.CO.UK @MENnewsdes­k

MORE people waited more than 12 hours at A&E in Stepping Hill hospital last month than anywhere else in the country.

National data also places the Stockport hospital as fifth-worst nationally for four-hour wait breaches, with exactly a third of patients waiting longer than that to be seen.

Apart from the Royal Bolton, figures show all Greater Manchester’s other hospitals were well above average in terms of performanc­e, in a month that saw the worst national figures on record.

But Stepping Hill’s performanc­e indicates it is struggling. It was one of 60 hospitals to see patients wait longer than 12 hours, which is not supposed to happen in any department.

In most of those cases, however, only a handful of patients were affected - while in Stepping Hill, 63 people ended up in that position.

Targets brought in by New Labour are supposed to see 95pc of patients seen within four hours, although that national target has been missed consistent­ly since 2015.

October saw the worst national figure on record, at 74.5pc.

In Stockport, just 67pc of people were seen in that time, however, with only four hospitals in Birmingham, Lincolnshi­re, Shrewsbury and

Norfolk performing worse. At the Royal Bolton, the figure was 70pc.

In a statement, Stockport NHS Foundation Trust acknowledg­ed the unit was under continuous strain.

“We are experienci­ng long-term heavy pressures in our A&E emergency department and these are having an ongoing impact on our waiting times,” said a spokesman.

“We serve an area with a population that has a high portion of older people, who are often frail with complex conditions and they place a particular demand on our emergency services.

“We always prioritise our most urgent cases and when patients who need to be admitted to hospital are described as ‘waiting’ in the A&E department they are still receiving the safe care and necessary treatment that they need.

“We are continuing to work closely with colleagues across the health and care system in Stockport on longer-term solutions to the pressures our services face and the public can help by only visiting our A&E if it is a genuine emergency.”

The M.E.N. reported earlier this year on tensions between the hospital trust, local clinical commission­ers and Stockport council, whose plan to pool resources in the longterm had been ditched abruptly amid disagreeme­nt.

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