The Independent

NHS plan for winter crisis risks ‘doubling up’ patients

- REBECCA THOMAS HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

NHS trusts across London are set to start moving patients from A&E onto wards “irrespecti­ve” of whether there are beds available, The Independen­t has learned. The new model, which involves shifting patients every two hours out of A&E and onto wards called acute medical units, has prompted concerns that patients could be “double lodged” on hospital wards.

The decision follows the trial of a new system by North Bristol NHS Trust last month, which said it would be moving three patients every hour from A&E onto wards in a bid to address severe ambulance handover delays.

On Thursday, health secretary Steve Barclay said that the “number one” priority for the NHS currently is tackling ambulance handover delays, with a “small” number of trusts accounting for half of all delays. Long waits for ambulance crews to hand over patients to A&E department­s is having a knock-on effect on the service’s capacity to respond to 999 calls.

According to figures from the Associatio­n of Ambulance Chief Executives, more than 100,000 patients are likely to have come to some harm this year as a direct result of ambulance handover delays. Meanwhile, 12-hour waits in A&E are now averaging 100,000 a month, as The Independen­t reported last month.

In August, NHS England published its winter plan, which revealed that it is seeking to open 7,000 more beds across hospitals in England, although it is not clear how many staff will be needed in order to achieve this.

In a memo sent this month, seen by The Independen­t, NHS clinicians in one hospital were told that London trusts would be rolling out the North Bristol model at “pace” ahead of winter. The system involves moving one patient from A&E onto a ward every two hours “irrespecti­ve of bed availabili­ty”.

It will be trialled at six hospitals, including Northwick Park, St George’s, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Princess Royal University Hospital, North Middlesex, and Queen’s Hospital. Queen’s Hospital is already running a similar pilot on a smaller scale. However, The Independen­t understand­s that the trust is able to pause the stream of patients should safety become a problem.

Speaking to The Independen­t, one NHS director said the move would lead to “double lodging” patients, which means squeezing more patients into wards, and that this could be “dangerous” for patients. However, A&E doctors told The Independen­t that the move should be welcomed, as it spreads the crowding and risk

for patients across hospital department­s rather than confining it to A&E.

The system relies on hospitals dischargin­g patients in a timely way. On Thursday, the health secretary revealed that the number of people stuck in hospital had reached more than 12,000.

According to a presentati­on given by the North Bristol trust to NHS leaders and seen by The Independen­t, prior to implementi­ng the new model, the trust had on average 14 ambulances queueing outside A&E for four hours each day, while its longest handover delays were nine hours – a situation that was causing the local ambulance provider to lose 139 hours a day. The trust said that its average length of stay in emergency department­s was 13 hours.

According to the documents, in August, after adopting the new model, the North Bristol trust was able to reduce the number of ambulances queueing outside A&E department­s, and reduce its longest delays to three hours, resulting in the average time patients spent in A&E dropping to 10 hours.

Dr Nick Scriven, a former president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said: “This will only be a safe and viable model with 24-hour decision makers in place and very low base ward occupancy levels, so there must be complete confidence this is achievable before any rollout is considered. Much more planning and consultati­on is needed to develop a comprehens­ive programme that factors in staffing, expertise, patient needs, flow through and out of hospital, and contingenc­ies when problems occur.”

A spokespers­on for the NHS in London said: “It is right that the NHS in London looks at ways to safely reduce ambulance handover delays – including by learning from trusts elsewhere in the country – and new processes are only implemente­d following consultati­on with clinicians and when it is safe to do so.”

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 ?? ?? Measures include moving patients out of A&E every two hours onto ‘acute medical units’ (PA)
Measures include moving patients out of A&E every two hours onto ‘acute medical units’ (PA)

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