Newbury Weekly News

Ring 111 before visiting hospital A&E

-

PEOPLE are being asked to ring 111 before visiting A&E at Reading’s Royal Berkshire Hospital.

The change of policy was announced recently by the Berkshire West Clinical Commission­ing Group, in conjunctio­n with the Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust.

The aim is to ensure efficient use of healthcare resources and allow for social distancing restrictio­ns on hospital premises.

The new guidance suggests that all reports of urgent, but nonlife-threatenin­g, injuries and conditions be directed to a 111 operator.

They will triage the call and direct the patient to the most relevant service.

These revised arrangemen­ts do not apply in case of emergencie­s, such as suspected heart attacks, strokes or serious breathing difficulti­es.

In such instances, residents should call 999 or seek support at A&E.

The ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic has led to concerns over crowd conditions in hospitals, with fears that unnecessar­y A&E visits could exacerbate the situation.

Dr Zac Etheridge, clinical lead for acute medicine, said: “NHS 111 First will help people get the most appropriat­e care for their medical condition.

“Many people who come to ED don’t have emergency, life-threatenin­g conditions and could be treated elsewhere, often more quickly.

“So whilst we still need people to ring 999 and come to ED during emergencie­s, we would ask those seeking non-emergency care to contact NHS 111 First.

“They will then receive the best care in a timely and more convenient way.

“This new way of working means we can cut the queues, over crowding and longer waits in ED and this will also help us reduce the risk of infection of things like Covid and flu.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom