These are the latest national Accident and Emergency waiting
times taken from an article in The Independent
today;
First
missed targets of the winter heighten fears that casualty wards will struggle
with seasonal workload
Charlie Cooper
Health Reporter
Friday 13 December 2013
Casualty
wards in England have missed their waiting times
targets for
the first time this winter, heightening fears that accident and
emergency
units may struggle to cope with the seasonal spike in hospital
admissions.
Nationwide,
94.8 per cent of patients at all A&Es, minor injury units and urgent care
centres were still admitted or treated within four hours in the first week of
December, but this was just below government targets of 95 per cent.
At major
casualty wards, the figure was even lower – 92.2 per cent. The last time so
many patients had to wait longer than four hours was in April.
Overall,
3,678 patients waited for between four and 12 hours. Five patients had to wait
for more than 12 hours to be treated or admitted.
Although
the number of people attending A&E is in fact highest in spring and summer,
emergency admissions to hospital through all routes, including GP and social
care referrals, peak in the winter months as seasonal illnesses take their
toll, particularly among older patients.
This
increases bed occupancy on hospital wards, which in turn makes it more
difficult for emergency doctors to admit patients from A&E, driving up
waiting times for those arriving at A&E for treatment.
Health
chiefs said it had been the busiest week of the year so far with 415,400
A&E attendances and 105,800 emergency admissions.
Two thirds
of NHS trusts with a major A&E unit missed the four hour target.
Nationally, major A&E units have not the target since July.
Dame
Barbara Hakin, chief operating officer for NHS England said that while it was
“disappointing” patients were waiting longer than they should, A&Es were
seeing “many more patients than ever before”.
“Every year
we see a dip in the figures for December, with week-on-week variations, which
is why we fully assess how local systems are coping with winter pressures over
a longer period,” she said.
“We knew
this winter would be difficult but it is important to stress the NHS continues
to deliver a good service, with 94.8% of people going to hospital for urgent
care this week treated, admitted or discharged within four hours. This is
thanks to the hard work and dedication of our frontline staff.”
A
Department of Health spokesperson said: "There hasn't been an entire
December in the past five years where the NHS has not missed its A&E
target. But last week, the NHS saw more people in A&E than in the same
period in any previous December, and saw more patients — almost 400,000 -
within four hours in that period.
Neil Harris
(a don’t stop till you drop production)
Home: helpmesortoutstpeters.blogspot.com
No comments:
Post a Comment