Nottingham Post

‘Delays in treatment are leading to deaths’

NOTTS GPS SHARE THEIR CONCERNS IN LETTER TO PATIENTS

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standard of service for our patients.

“Across the country the NHS is on its knees, and it has become impossible to deliver a service that does no harm. We understand the utter frustratio­n and despair that you, on the receiving end of these cutbacks, feel.

“Waiting times for GP appointmen­ts are excessivel­y long, telephone lines have never-ending waits, and access to hospital services, with more than seven million people on waiting lists for treatment, is becoming almost impossible. None of us works in the NHS for fame and fortune.”

They add: “We do it because we believe in what it is supposed to deliver: high quality, safe, healthcare for everyone, free at the point of delivery, regardless of ability to pay.”

Later in the letter the pair discuss the number of NHS staff suffering with their mental health due to the “severe stress” levels from the job and being treated poorly by patients who three years ago applauded them each Thursday evening during the pandemic.

The letter states: “But now, instead of weekly applause, our staff are subject to ever increasing and daily abuse and aggression from patients and family members, understand­ably frustrated by delays to access treatment. I have never known so many NHS staff to suffer from mental and physical ill health, the effects of years of severe stress.

“Staff absences are at a record high: 60,000 nursing jobs are currently unfilled; we have vacancies for 7,000 GPS and the NHS as a whole is missing 130,000 staff. Add to this the now unpreceden­ted huge demand for NHS care from millions of patients and it’s not difficult to see why patients are increasing­ly subjected to a severe lack of access to healthcare.”

Both doctors also speak about the seven million people who are currently on waiting lists for treatment, with accident and emergency department­s “bursting at the seams” and ambulances failing to get patients to hospitals quick enough.

They explained that these factors are contributi­ng to patients dying.

They wrote: “Within our practice and more widely, we have numerous examples of patients experienci­ng unnecessar­y dangerous delays to treatment and current data shows that delays to cancer treatments, as just one example, is leading to greatly increased death rates.

“All this could, and should, have been avoided. Years of financial restraint before Covid-19 meant that the NHS was unprepared and unable to cope.

“We need massively increased NHS funding, to improve services, attract new staff, reduce waiting times and make sure that we can begin again to deliver a first-class health service fit for the future. And until then, we at Jubilee Park Medical Practice promise you this.

“We will continue to do our best and strive to make things better: to see you sooner and try to deliver an even higher standard of care with the scarce resources with which we operate.

“We thank you for your understand­ing, patience, and support as we endeavour to continue the campaign to protect our NHS.”

Their letter echoes statements from other doctors in the BMA report, with repeated sentiments that doctors cannot continue to pick up the pieces of Government­al “failure” to protect the country’s health, and that it has become impossible for GPS to do everything expected of them.

The Post has asked the Department for Health and Social Care for a response.

In his Autumn Statement last month, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the NHS will receive an extra £3.3 billion in each of the next two years – but experts have warned the cash is probably only half of what is needed to keep the health service afloat.

 ?? AARON CHOWN/PA WIRE ?? Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has said the NHS will receive an extra £3.3bn in each of the next two years
AARON CHOWN/PA WIRE Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has said the NHS will receive an extra £3.3bn in each of the next two years

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