Ambulance Delays: East Midlands Service Loses 25,000 Hours in Hospital Queues

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Ambulance Delays: East Midlands Service Loses 25,000 Hours in Hospital Queues
AMBULANCE DELAYSHOSPITAL HANDOVERPATIENT SAFETY
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East Midlands Ambulance Service (EMAS) staff lost 25,000 hours waiting outside hospitals to hand over patients in November, marking the second-worst month for handover delays in its history. The average delay in Northamptonshire was 1 hour 25 minutes, far exceeding the national target of 15 minutes. The trust attributes the issue to pressure on the entire healthcare system, hindering patient flow from hospitals through wards and into social care. This has led to concerns about patient safety and staff welfare.

Staff at an ambulance service lost 25,000 hours in queues outside hospitals waiting to hand patients over last month.

The trust said an increase in ambulances on the road was not resulting in a reduction in response times "It's an awful patient experience; ambulances aren't set up to look after patients for hours and hours on end.Rob Sissons/BBC, trust chief executive Richard Henderson said there were 402 breaches of minimum care safety standards in November, which was evidence of the impact "on the quality of care".

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AMBULANCE DELAYS HOSPITAL HANDOVER PATIENT SAFETY STAFF WELFARE HEALTHCARE SYSTEM

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