Health

Spring brings no respite for NHS in England

The start of spring has brought little respite for the NHS in England, with A&E departments still struggling.

One in seven patients spent longer than the four-hour waiting target figure in A&E in March – only marginally better than the situation seen during winter.

It comes amid mounting concern about the pressure in cancer care.

That data lags behind the A&E figures – it only covers the winter months – but shows nearly one in four patients waited longer than they should.

That is a record low – as the BBC reported last month – since records began 10 years ago.

Long waits are also being seen in other parts of the UK, with nearly four in 10 patients waiting more than two months for treatment to start in Northern Ireland.

Performance is better in Wales and Scotland, but both are still missing the target to see cancer patients.

If you can't see the NHS Tracker, click or tap here.

Dr Nick Scriven, of the Society of Acute Medicine, said: "This has been and continues to be an extremely challenging time for urgent care in the NHS, which has been overlooked amid the chaos of Brexit and the smokescreen it has created."

He also warned that the situation could get worse even though winter has ended.

"My major imminent concern is that hospitals are working flat out at the moment and we have a looming spell of bank holidays, when many support services will not be functioning, heaping up the already relentless pressure."

The warning comes as the NHS is paving the way to scrap the four-hour A&E target in England.

Next month, Read More – Source

[contf]
[contfnew]

BBC

[contfnewc]
[contfnewc]

Related Posts