Yorkshire Post

Doctor warns over A&E waiting limits

Don’t ‘move goalposts’, says top doctor

- DON MORT NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: don.mort@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @Exp_Don

A doctor has warned against “moving the goalposts” to make A&E waiting times look better as bosses consider scrapping the target for patients to be seen within four hours.

NHS England is said to be in favour of ditching the standard for 95 per cent of patients to be admitted, transferre­d or discharged within four hours.

A LEADING doctor has warned against “moving the goalposts” to make A&E waiting times look better as NHS bosses consider scrapping the target for patients to be seen within four hours.

NHS England is said to be in favour, in the next 12 months, of ditching the standard for 95 per cent of patients to be admitted, transferre­d or discharged within four hours.

The move could see new targets introduced for the treatment of serious conditions like heart attacks and strokes.

People with less serious conditions might have to wait longer, although NHS trusts around the country are already seeking to divert non-emergency patients to urgent treatment centres.

Taj Hassan, president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said any changes to the A&E target must have the support of medics. “The four-hour emergency care standard is a remarkaNHS

ble totemic standard that is now deeply ingrained in the very fabric of NHS culture and process. It has very many advantages and some limitation­s,” he said.

“Attempting to make such change at such pace and without due regard to expert evidence is doomed to result in significan­t unintended consequenc­es.”

England figures show that in January just 84.4 per cent of patients were seen in four hours at hospitals in England, the worst performanc­e since records began.

Calls have been made for staffing levels and a lack of community beds to be addressed to help tackle A&E overcrowdi­ng.

Dr Hassan, who is a Leeds A&E doctor, said: “Moving the goalposts of measuremen­t to make things seemingly look better is certainly not the way forward.

“Any attempt to impose a set of standards upon NHS emergency department staff that are not clinically appropriat­e, thoroughly tested or do not have the support of doctors, consultant­s, nurses and all other employees working in this environmen­t will have a significan­t risk of critically destabilis­ing a substantia­l number of systems that are struggling to maintain safety.”

NHS England said no final decision had been made yet and any changes would be tested before being implemente­d from October.

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