13 Nisan 2017 Perşembe

Patients suffer worst ever winter for A&E admission delays

Emergency patients had the worst winter on record for being admitted to NHS hospitals in England, with nearly 200,000 waiting at least four hours.


Figures from the health service showed a near five-fold increase in the number of A&E patients suffering admission delays over the past five years.


Between December 2016 and February 2017 a total of 195,764 patients waited at least four hours to be admitted to hospital from A&E, up from 40,791 in 2011/12.


The figure is the highest since records began and marks a sharp rise on the winter months last year when 134,576 patients missed the four-hour target.


Total emergency admissions to NHS hospitals in England rose from 1.3 million in winter 2011/12 to 1.44 million in winter 2016/17.


Extreme waiting times also reached record levels, as 1,877 patients were forced to wait at least 12 hours before being admitted to hospital from A&E this winter, compared with 375 the previous year.


Research suggests hospitals are creaking under the weight of demand. A&E departments had to close their doors to ambulances almost twice as often this winter compared with the previous three years, a report from the Nuffield Trust showed.


The number of ambulance diverts in place at hospitals in England hit 478 for the three-month period from December to February, compared with an average of 249 over the same period in 2013/14, 2014/15 and 2015/16.


The number of days lost to so-called “bed-blockers” also hit record levels in England this winter. A total of 577,195 days were lost through delayed transfers of care from December to February, compared with 471,780 in winter 2015/16.



Patients suffer worst ever winter for A&E admission delays

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