Yorkshire Post

Patients facing rise in waits for ambulance handovers

1,400pc rise in ill held back at hospitals

- JOE COOPER LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

PATIENTS ARE waiting for more than an hour in some North Yorkshire hospitals cases to be transferre­d from an ambulance, new figures have revealed.

In December ambulance crews had to wait more than an hour before seriously ill patients could be passed into the care of medics 675 times, which is up from just 44 times in December 2020 – a rise of more than 1,400 per cent.

The number of times ambulances have had to wait 30 minutes to an hour has also doubled to 479 cases over the same period.

Last month Yorkshire Ambulance Service confirmed the 40 military personnel would be trained and will be working with patients within two weeks, with the service expecting their services would be required “for a number of weeks”.

The military staff were being used to transport patients with less-urgent needs after the trust suspended its usual non-emergency patient transfer service taking people on routine journeys to planned care clinics on Wednesday as a result of staff absences due to Covid.

And now the York and Scarboroug­h Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust’s performanc­e position is in “a parlous state” despite the best efforts of staff, consultant cardiologi­st Steven Holmberg told a meeting of the board of directors yesterday.

Mr Holmberg, a non-executive director on the board, said: “Last month we saw an increase in ambulance handover delays which may now be remitting, but they were extraordin­ary last month – completely unpreceden­ted, I think.”

The trust has been working with Yorkshire Ambulance Service in relation to growing concern across the Yorkshire region regarding the impact of ambulance handover delays and risk of harm to patients.

AMBULANCE WAITING times outside hospitals in North Yorkshire have rocketed as the health system buckles under “extreme pressure”, NHS leaders have been told.

There were 675 occasions in York and Scarboroug­h hospitals where ambulance crews had to wait more than an hour before seriously ill patients could be passed into the care of medics in December 2021, up from just 44 times in December 2020 – a rise of more than 1,400 per cent.

The number of times ambulance have had to wait 30 minutes to an hour has also doubled to 479 cases over the same period.

The York and Scarboroug­h Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust’s performanc­e position is in “a parlous state” despite the best efforts of staff, consultant cardiologi­st Steven Holmberg told a meeting of the board of directors.

Mr Holmberg, a non-executive director on the board, said: “Last month we saw an increase in ambulance handover delays which may now be remitting, but they were extraordin­ary last month – completely unpreceden­ted, I think.”

Waiting times for cancer treatment and diagnostic­s are also under “extreme pressure”, Mr Holmberg said.

“There’s no doubt that patient harm is resulting from this position,” he added.

A handover delay does not always

mean a patient has waited in an ambulance. They may have been moved into an A&E department, but there were no staff available to complete the handover.

The trust has been working with Yorkshire Ambulance Service in relation to growing concern across the Yorkshire region regarding the impact of ambulance handover delays and risk of harm to patients.

The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic has continued to exert huge pressure in the region’s hospitals, despite case numbers falling in the community.

Wendy Scott, the trust’s chief operating officer, said Covid-19 was hitting hospital capacity, staffing numbers, and the ability to discharge patients back into the community.

York Hospital had four Covid-19 positive wards as of last month, with three areas at Scarboroug­h Hospital.

Nearly 1,000 staff across the trust were off sick as of January 11.

Board papers also show that 12 hour trolley waits in York and Scarboroug­h have risen from 14 in December 2020 to 298 in December 2021.

Over the same period, the number of people waiting in emergency department­s for more than eight hours has risen from 503 to 1,661.

Trust leaders have recently discussed the possibilit­y of erecting a temporary tent outside emergency department­s to cope, though there may not be enough space outside York Hospital.

Their use might help support the message to the public to avoid emergency department­s “unless absolutely necessary”, trust leaders have said.

There’s no doubt that patient harm is resulting from this... Consultant cardiologi­st Steven Holmberg on waiting times for cancer treatment

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