The Scotsman

A&ES hit ‘terrifying’ new low for delays

●Figures show more patients than ever are facing long waits for help

- By ELSA MAISHMAN

The percentage of patients visiting A&E who are seen within four hours has hit a “terrifying” new low in Scotland, latest figures show, with ministers urged to “get a grip” on the growing crisis.

The figure has been declining since the summer amid high demand, staffing shortages and a lack of patient flow through hospitals.

In the week to october 3, just 71.3 per cent of patients were seen within four hours, a five percentage point drop on the previous week, according to data published by Public Health Scotland.

The figure is the lowest since records began in 2015, with the Scottish Government target set at 95 per cent.

With 25,000 visits to A&E in that week, it means more than 7,000 patients waited longer than four hours. Some 1,782 people waited more than eight hours, while a record 591 patients waited longer than 12 hours. Last week, Scotland’s Health Secretary, Humza Yousaf, warned that Scotland’s NHS faces an “incredibly difficult winter” despite announcing a £300 million funding boost.

But opposition parties have now accused him of “overseeing a scandalous situation” and leaving A&E department­s “beyond breaking point”.

Scottish Conservati­ve health spokesman Dr Sandesh Gulhane said :“these figures are nothing short of an unmitigate­d disaster for Humza Yousaf.

“He has completely failed to resource our A&E department­s that are beyond breaking point.

“Humza Yousaf is overseeing a scandalous situation in our NHS. Thousands of patients are not being seen within the SNP’S own target waiting times. His inaction is putting heroic staff under immense pressure before we even hit the peak winter period. The support being offered by our UK

armed forces is incredibly welcome, but the Health Secretary has still not outlined a plan to maximise their use.

“His winter plan, which finally arrived last week, was far too little, too late. Humza Yousaf must finally show some leadership and get on top of this A&E crisis, which is now completely out of control.”

Scotland’s worst-performing health board once again was NHS Forth Valley, where 50.3 per cent of A&E patients were seen within the target time, followed by NHS Lanarkshir­e (62.9 per cent) and NHS Fife (64.8 per cent).

Only Scotland’s island health boards – NHS Western Isles, NHS Shetland and NHS Orkney – met the waiting time target.

Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Alex Cole-hamilton said: “These numbers are terrifying for staff and patients alike.

“The NHS has always been a safety net for anyone who needs it but, after years of poor workforce management, that net has huge holes in it. Undoubtedl­y, people will be slipping through.

“The health service isn’t just struggling, it is being crippled by government mismanagem­ent.

“There simply aren’t enough nurses available to prop hospitals up. There are thousands of vacancies, and the Health Secretary proposes recruiting just 200 from overseas.

“Those working through this are swamped, and have little reason to trust that this Government will make things better. The SNP have been in charge of our health service for 14 years. This crisis is entirely of their making. There is nobody else to blame.

“The Health Secretary needs to find a way to get more boots on the ground, and every single NHS staffer needs to be given a reason to stay. Things are going to get much worse before they get better.”

Scottish Labour’s health spokeswoma­n, Jackie Baillie, added: “It is becoming clear that we are on track for another winter catastroph­e this year if we fail to act.

“The SNP need to listen to the warnings from staff on the front line and get a grip on the growing emergency in our NHS before the cold weather really bites.

“There is no time to waste when this many lives are on the line.” Dr John Thomson, vice president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine in Scotland, said he expects waiting time performanc­es to get worse as winter progresses.

Speaking before the publicatio­n of new figures on Tuesday, he said: “The last four months have seen deteriorat­ing four hour standard performanc­e, and what that equates to is patients spending much longer than is necessary in emergency department­s.

“That's particular­ly patients who are waiting for a bed elsewhere in the system, and they're spending much longer than ever before in emergency department­s.

“They are continuing to receive the best quality care that we can give them… but the care they should be receiving is inpatient care within a speciality area, and that's not going to be the same.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Scotland’s worst-performing health board was NHS Forth Valley, where 50.3 per cent of A&E patients were seen within the target time followed by NHS Lanarkshir­eand NHS Fife
Scotland’s worst-performing health board was NHS Forth Valley, where 50.3 per cent of A&E patients were seen within the target time followed by NHS Lanarkshir­eand NHS Fife

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom