The Independent

Minister admits ambulance delays risk needless deaths

- KATE DEVLIN

There is a “material risk” that patients are dying unnecessar­ily because of long ambulance delays, the health secretary has admitted. But Steve Barclay also signalled that there are plans to scale back the number of NHS targets, seen as a key measure of NHS performanc­e. And he faced accusation­s that he was peddling “frankly pretty dishonest stuff” as he defended the

government’s actions on the health service in the face of criticism from the leader of one of the country’s largest unions.

Pressed on the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme on the question of whether people are dying because of ambulance delays, Mr Barclay conceded: “If there is a delay in an ambulance getting to someone, in terms of unmet need, then obviously that is a material risk.”

He insisted that improvemen­ts were being made to the “flow” of patients, following stories of long waiting times and ambulances being stuck for hours outside hospitals. But the government has been criticised for an announceme­nt last week that long-delayed social care reforms will be put off for another two years.

Matthew Taylor, the chief executive of the NHS Confederat­ion, which represents managers of hospital trusts, told Sky News that “almost every hospital” in England, Wales and Northern Ireland “has got wards full of people who could go home, who should go home”, but that there are not enough social care staff to look after them. He added that the health service has problems with “how we recruit, how we retain and how we motivate our staff”.

As the row raged, health minister Will Quince said he was “to blame” for unnecessar­y deaths in the NHS. “Ultimately, I’m the minister, I am to blame. And it’s my responsibi­lity. It’s my

responsibi­lity to fix this,” he told Times Radio. “Anybody who dies prematurel­y or needlessly whilst waiting for an ambulance, I take incredibly seriously, and my heart goes out to them, and indeed their families.” He said that 90 per cent of the issues around dischargin­g patients are occurring across only half of NHS trusts.

Gary Smith, the general secretary of the GMB union, said Mr Barclay was “deluded” in regard to government funding for the NHS and care services. “Why didn’t they tax non-doms? Why didn’t they tax the richest people in this country, with the broadest shoulders, who pay no tax at all? What have they done about bankers’ bonuses?” he asked.

“The Tory government has made ideologica­l decisions for over a decade about cutting services, and that’s what has left services on their knees, and this is not hyperbole – our care homes were turned into morgues during the pandemic because of mismanagem­ent and cuts. People are dying because of cuts to services, so I find that interview utterly dishonest, and frankly the minister is deluded.”

Last month, an interview with the health secretary was interrupte­d by a woman who accused him of “doing nothing” about ambulance response times. The latest NHS figures show an average wait of more than an hour for heart attack and stroke victims last month. Documents published alongside last week’s autumn statement commit the NHS to improving some performanc­e targets, including halving average ambulance response times for this category of patient.

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 ?? (Getty) ?? The hea l th minister insists improvemen­ts are being made to the ‘f l ow’ of patients after accounts of l ong waiting times and ambu l ances being stuck for hours outside hospita l s
(Getty) The hea l th minister insists improvemen­ts are being made to the ‘f l ow’ of patients after accounts of l ong waiting times and ambu l ances being stuck for hours outside hospita l s
 ?? (PA) ?? Steve Barc l ay has been accused of dishonesty by the l eader of the GMB union
(PA) Steve Barc l ay has been accused of dishonesty by the l eader of the GMB union

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