Western Morning News (Saturday)

Cornwall’s record ‘worst’ for ambulance handover

- IAN JONES

AROUND one in seven ambulance patients in England are still waiting more than an hour to be handed to A&E teams at hospitals, with nearly one in three waiting at least 30 minutes.

And the worst performer, in data analysed for last week, was the Royal Cornwall Hospital Trusts, with 56% of patients waiting more than an hour in an ambulance to be admitted to the hospital in Truro.

Across the country, the numbers are higher than at any point last winter.

Health experts said the delays show the NHS is facing “the toughest pressures since modern records began” and is struggling to create space for new arrivals.

A total of 23,894 handover delays of half an hour or longer were recorded across all hospitals trusts last week, according to NHS England.

This was 31% of all arrivals by ambulance, the same level as the previous week.

The proportion stood at 23% at the beginning of December 2021 and 11% at the start of December 2020.

Some 11,296 patients, 15% of the total, waited more than an hour to be handed over last week. This was also unchanged on the previous week, but up from 10% a year ago and just 3% in December 2020.

NHS trusts in England have a target of 95% of all ambulance handovers to be completed with 30 minutes, with 100% to be completed within 60 minutes.

Danielle Jefferies, of health charity The King’s Fund, said the figures show “an NHS bursting at the seams” as it attempts to meet sharply rising demand while keeping patients safe.

She continued: “Improving ambulance delays has been a government priority for some time, but today’s numbers show that one in seven ambulances are delayed by more than an hour as they wait for stretched A&E teams to assess patients.

“Problems at the hospital front door are indicative of issues at the back door. People are being stranded in hospital because of a long-term lack of investment in social care and NHS community services.

“It is easy to become numb to dire NHS performanc­e figures, but the health service really is facing the toughest pressures since modern records began.” Analysis of the data by the PA news agency shows that, among those trusts reporting at least 500 ambulance arrivals last week, the highest proportion of patients waiting over an hour to be handed over was 56% at Royal Cornwall Hospitals

– affecting 361 out of 639 patients.

This was followed by University Hospitals of North Midlands at 52% (384 out of 739 patients), Northern Lincolnshi­re & Goole also at 52% (335 out of 643), University Hospitals Bristol & Weston at 42% (339 out of 805), Gloucester­shire Hospitals at 41% (308 out of 756) and University Hospitals of Leicester at 38% (386 out of 1,023).

A handover delay does not always mean a patient has waited in the ambulance. They may have been moved into an A&E department but staff were not available to complete the handover. But the high level of delays reflects the struggle faced by hospitals in finding space for new arrivals.

NHS figures show an average of 13,358 hospital beds per day last week in England were occupied by people ready to be discharged.

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