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Winter set to be worst ever for Accident and Emergency waits, health leaders warn

The NHS is facing the worst winter for A&E waits on record, as hospitals are being “pressurised like never before”, health leaders have warned. The Royal College of Emergency Medicine says it believes this will have been the worst December for hospital bed occupancy and emergency care delays.

The warning comes as hospitals face soaring demand driven by winter infections like flu, strep A and Covid. The government says it is “working tirelessly” to ensure patient care.

A number of NHS trusts have declared critical incidents in recent days, signalling they are unable to function as normal due to extraordinary pressure.

Dr Adrian Boyle, the president of the RCEM, told the BBC that hospitals were “too full” and the situation was “much worse than in previous years”. Ambulances waiting outside hospitals was the “most obvious marker” of this, Dr Boyle told Radio 4’s Today programme.

In November, around 37,837 people waited more than 12 hours in A&E for a decision to be admitted to a hospital department, according to data from NHS England. This was more than triple the equivalent figure for November 2021, when an estimated 10,646 waited longer than 12 hours.

In separate remarks to the PA news agency, Dr Boyle said he “would not be at all surprised” if December proved to be the worst month on record for hospital occupancy rates.

Over 90% of senior doctors reported there had been people waiting in their emergency department for more than 24 hours last week, he added.

Dr Boyle remarked: “The gallows joke about this is now that 24 hours in A&E is not a documentary, it’s a way of life.”

He said the health service had been stretched further by a “staff retention crisis”, as well as a recent nurse and ambulance worker strikes and a “demand shock” caused by winter infections.
Fears of a “twindemic” of flu and Covid infections were “sadly being realised”, added MP Steve Brine, chair of the Commons health and social care select committee.

This was “very heavily weighted” towards flu infections, Mr. Brine said in his own interview with the BBC.

Flu case numbers in Wales have put the country’s hospitals in an “unprecedented situation”, says its top doctor – and those with symptoms have been asked to stay away from hospitals.

At the same time, the 111 telephone helpline has come under “significant pressure”, Dr Sir Frank Atherton said. People have instead been urged to consult the 111 website.

Meanwhile in England, the latest figures show there were more than 3,700 patients a day in hospital with flu last week – up from 520 a day the month before, and just 34 a day this time last year.

Source: BBC

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