Nearly 200 people waited over 12 hours for a bed at A&E departments run by Pennine Acute in December

Date published: 21 January 2021


Nearly 200 people waited over 12 hours for a bed at A&E departments run by Pennine Acute Trust last month, the highest figures in the North West.

In December 2020, 199 patients at Pennine Acute hospitals waited over 12 hours for a bed. Previous figures recorded 337 (November) and 200 (October) – both of which were the highest in the country for those months.

Pennine Acute hospitals with emergency departments include Fairfield General Hospital and The Royal Oldham Hospital but the data also includes North Manchester General which is now operated by the Manchester University Foundation Trust.

Having previously had more patients waiting this length of time than anywhere else in the country for the prior two months, Pennine has now dropped to experiencing the fifth highest figure nationally. This rose as high as 611 patients for one NHS trust based in London, the highest in the country for December 2020.

For December, patients at 74 of 216 NHS trusts experienced a 12 hour wait.
 

 


Nationally, the latest data published by NHS England shows that the number of patients waiting 12 hours or more before being admitted in December 2020 is the highest figure since records began.

Across the country, 3,745 patients were spending 12 hours or more in Emergency Departments. It marks an increase of 75% on last month, November 2020, and an increase of 60% on the same month last year, December 2019.

Quarterly data published by NHS England presented a similar picture. Q3 of 2020 recorded 7,153 people waiting 12 hours or more to be admitted, marking a 70% increase on Q3 2019.

Q1 2020 recorded only 505 patients waiting 12 hours or more to be admitted, equal to a 1,300% increase in Q3 2020.

Responding, a spokesperson for the Northern Care Alliance NHS Group, which brings together Salford Royal and Pennine Acute trusts, said: “While our A&E performance has improved in recent months, we have seen a steep rise in the number of patients with Covid-19, which is putting additional pressure on staff and our services.

“The safety of our patients is our first priority and staff are working incredibly hard alongside other partners in the system to tackle the challenges Covid-19 brings and we would encourage the public to do everything they can to help minimise the spread of the virus, adhering to restrictions and following public health guidance by washing their hands, wearing a face covering, and maintaining social distancing measures.”

Figures released this week by the Greater Manchester Combined Authority show the number of patients in Greater Manchester hospitals on 19 January with Covid-19 has increased to 1,238. 157 of these patients are being treated in high dependency or intensive care wards, up from 138 last week.

 

Number of cases occupying hospital beds in Greater Manchester. Weekly figures up to 18 January
Number of cases occupying hospital beds in Greater Manchester. Weekly figures up to 18 January

 

Dr Katherine Henderson, President of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said: “These data are truly alarming. While attendances are still down, the number of patients spending over 12 hours in the ED has skyrocketed – and these are just the tip of the iceberg. We are no longer in a crisis; this is a national emergency.

“Patients should never have to wait for 12 hours or more to be admitted, but there are just not enough beds to admit patients to. It is incredibly challenging for staff who have to deliver care in corridors, which is unsafe and unacceptable at the best of times, but now is has the added risk of further spreading covid.

“I cannot emphasise the gravity of this emergency. Hospitals are under intense pressures. Ambulance services across the country are struggling to keep up with the number of calls they are receiving; hospitals cannot cope with the number of patients. Despite attendances being down, 12-hour waits are higher than ever, partly due to the severity of patients’ conditions.

“But these 12-hour waits are only measured from decision to admit to admission. Our annual Winter flow project shows, in part, the true extent of 12-hour waits; data from 32 trusts across the UK in December alone shows over 12,400 patients spent over 12 hours in an ED – measured from when they arrived.

"We cannot properly tackle this problem unless we confront it properly, so we welcome the new metric being introduced by NHS England with the consultation on the Clinical Review of standards, which will measure 12 hour waits from arrival to discharge. This will help us see where the problems in Emergency Departments lie and help us to resolve issues quicker, including putting a stop to unsafe crowding and corridor care.

“We entered the pandemic short of staff and short of beds and now we are truly feeling those shortages. It is devastating. Departments are already working beyond normal full capacity but are still trying to expand capacity further. We are finding beds and resources wherever we can.

“Healthcare staff have been doing this for eleven months, there’s no clap for carers or support anymore, there are only more patients, more deaths, more hours and more shifts, and this time they are being stretched more thinly.

“The lives of those in the community are at serious risk and excess deaths could soar quickly. It is incredibly distressing that surgeries and some other urgent care are being put on hold. We are also concerned that attendances are down; our fear is that there are people in the community who need urgent and emergency care who are not seeking it.

“We do not have the virus under control. The situation is far worse than April 2019 and what is happening is not sustainable. Our NHS is now at a tipping point and if it tips, we will not be able to stop it.

“Healthcare workers are doing an exceptional job in an emergency like no other, for many it may be traumatic. We must support each other and work together and get through the coming weeks. We can still mitigate the impact and minimise the risk of further damage.”

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