2,000 Brits Dying a Month as Care System Collapses
LONDON (Dispatches) -- About 4,000
patients a day are spending more than 12 hours in accident and emergency department A&E as the care system “collapses”, Britain’s top accident and emergency doctor has said.
The head of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) issued the warning as nurses prepare for their first national strike in history, with two days of action planned before Christmas.
Hospitals are already under unprecedented pressure, with record numbers at A&E departments and a quarter of ambulance time lost to delays caused by queuing.
Dr Adrian Boyle, the president of the RCEM, said he was “very worried” about the numbers dying for want of prompt care, with hospitals increasingly too overcrowded to cope with the amount of people coming in.
Regulators have warned of “gridlock” across the system, meaning that many of those in need of emergency treatment are waiting far too long.
Data gathered by the RCEM suggest the number of patients stuck on trolleys for more than 12 hours has risen by 50 percent in a year. Struggles to access emergency care may now be responsible for about 2,000 deaths a month, analysis suggests.
Dr Boyle called for urgent action to tackle the mounting crisis and warned of a “really, really tough” winter ahead.
“We are very worried about what I would call British exceptionalism,” he said. “There is avoidable mortality that is occurring pretty much only in Britain – which is related to the collapse of the emergency care system.”
It comes as nurses prepare to strike on December 15 and 20, leaving hospitals stripped back to just emergency and urgent care services.
Chemotherapy sessions, cancer tests and transplant services are likely to be affected, while up to 30,000 operations and hundreds of thousands of appointments could be postponed.
NHS officials are particularly concerned by the threat of coordinated action between unions, which could push services to breaking point.
NHS data for England show that in 2021/22 almost a million people endured waits of at least 12 hours in A&E – three times higher than three years earlier.
Analysis by the RCEM, which was based on Freedom of Information disclosures, suggests the figure could reach 1.5 million this year, with a 50 percent rise in cases in a year.
NHS targets say A&E patients should be treated, admitted or discharged within four