This is taken from ‘The Independent’ newspaper, based on
labour party research.
Accident and Emergency departments have national guidelines
limiting the time taken for patients to be admitted or discharged. They use many
ruses to reduce this time; one of which is keeping patients waiting in
ambulances outside.
So the clock doesn’t start ticking……
Hundreds of
thousands of sick patients have been forced to wait in ambulances outside
emergency units - some stranded for up to eight hours - according to new
figures, because hospitals have been left "full to bursting".
Data
obtained by the Labour Party show that patients are being cared for in vehicles
outside A&E units for hours at a time, as “handover delays” continue to affect
people up and down the country.
The new
statistics, obtained through Freedom of Information requests, show that 280,000
patients suffered “handover delays” of at least 30 minutes during 2013/14,
which includes 30,000 people who were forced to wait for an hour or more.
Information
highlighting three areas where people were worst affected showed that patients
had waited up to eight hours and 11 minutes in West Midlands to get to the
emergency units.
Delays in
other parts of the country showed people stranded in ambulances for seven and a
half hours, while waits in London were over six hours.
NHS England says ambulances could become 'more
of a mobile treatment service' Labour
shadow health minister Jamie Reed told the Telegraph the figures show that under
David Cameron, hospitals have become “full to bursting,” making ambulances
queue at the doors for hours on end.
“Thousands
of vulnerable people, many of them elderly and frightened, are being wrongly
held in the backs of ambulances because hospitals don't have the space,” he
said.
The figures
show an 87 per cent rise in the number of people forced to wait over 30 minutes
since 2010/11, and a 50 per cent rise in people waiting over an hour.
But the NHS
England has countered the figures with its own data, claiming that the number
of ambulance handover delays for the winter of 2013/14 were down on the
previous year by 30 per cent. However, the data only covers the winter period.
An NHS
England spokesperson said: “We know that demands on ambulances are rising every
year, and we’re allocating a further £28 million to ambulance providers to help
them deal with these pressures.
“However in
some cases it may be the right thing to do for a patient to be cared for in the
ambulance before transfer to stabilise their condition.”
NHS
guidelines state that new arrivals to A&E should enter hospitals within 15
minutes, but NHS England said one of the aims of its Urgent and Emergency Care
Review is to “capitalise on the skills and abilities of paramedics and the wider
workforce so that ambulances can become more of a mobile treatment service,
rather than just a transport service.”
Eh, no, I don’t think so – ambulances are only that;
transport. It’s different to have paramedics doing triage but when the
ambulance is at the hospital the patient needs to be seen by a doctor as soon
as possible.
Neil Harris
(a don’t stop till you drop production)
Home: helpmesortoutthenhs.blogspot.comcontact me: neilwithpromisestokeep@gmail.com
amb
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