Record NHS A&E Wait Times Leave Patients Languishing on Trolleys for 12 Hours

Health News

Record NHS A&E Wait Times Leave Patients Languishing on Trolleys for 12 Hours
NHSEMERGENCYWAITING
  • 📰 DailyMailUK
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 217 sec. here
  • 10 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 107%
  • Publisher: 90%

Hospitals in England are facing a devastating crisis as record numbers of patients are left languishing on trolleys in A&E for 12 hours or more. This comes amid a severe shortage of beds and an escalating flu season, putting immense pressure on the already stretched NHS.

Hospitals left a record 518,000 patients languishing on trolleys in A&E for 12 hours or more last year, damning figures reveal. The rate is 400 times higher than the 1,306 reported a decade ago and comes amid a major shortage of beds preventing staff moving new arrivals on to wards. It shows emergency departments were already dangerously overwhelmed before the emergence of this winter's flu outbreak, forcing around 20 trusts to declare 'critical incidents'.

NHS England said an average of 5,408 patients a day were in hospital with flu last week, including 256 in critical care. It believes this number will rise now children have returned to school, where they risk catching the virus and taking it home to families and vulnerable relatives. Carrie Johnson, wife of former prime minister Boris, revealed over the weekend she spent the first week of 2025 in an NHS hospital suffering from flu and pneumonia. She said she had been struggling to breathe properly during a 'nasty' infection lasting nearly 18 days, and urged the public to get a flu jab. Figures being published this Thursday are expected to show the NHS is enduring its worst flu season for a decade. Damning figures show hospitals left a record 518,000 patients languishing on trolleys in A&E for 12 hours or more last year (stock image) Joanna Ormesher tweeted this photograph of the main corridor at Royal Blackburn Hospital in Lancashire yesterday, saying: 'Patients left out in cold corridors to be gawked at like exhibits in a zoo. No patient dignity and poor patient care. Shameful at best' A&Es and ambulance services suffered their busiest year ever in 2024 and crews dealt with more incidents in December than any previous month It comes as Labour was last night accused of being 'asleep at the wheel' during the crisis, which is expected to deepen this week. Professor Phil Banfield, chair of the British Medical Association, described corridor care as 'undignified' and 'unsafe', warning scenes inside NHS hospitals are now 'akin to those seen in developing countries'. He said hundreds of patients are suffering avoidable harm and deaths every week, with some dying before they are even seen by medics. Some A&Es are running at more than 200 per cent capacity, with waits of up to 50 hours for a bed and ambulances in 18-deep queues outside waiting to hand over new arrivals. Last week Whittington Hospital in north London published multiple adverts for nurses to work overtime providing 'corridor care' to patients on trolleys. And NHS trusts nationwide are now installing power sockets and oxygen lines in corridors as they prepare to treat more patients in trolleys along their walls. The Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) said corridors are 'open, noisy, brightly lit, often cold', making it 'difficult if not impossible' for patients to rest. It stressed it is 'not possible' to control the spread of infection in them, that it is 'challenging' for staff to monitor patients, and that privacy, dignity and confidentiality are 'not maintained. The RCEM warns long waits in A&E are extremely dangerous and are estimated to have contributed to 14,000 deaths in 2023. Meanwhile A&Es and ambulance services suffered their busiest year ever in 2024 and crews dealt with more incidents in December than any previous month. There were a record 518,213 waits of 12 hours or more in A&E last year – timed from when doctors made a decision to admit the patient – according to analysis of NHS England data by the Liberal Democrats. This is up by more than 100,000 – or 25 per cent – on the previous year, when there were 415,136. In stark contrast, there were just 1,306 such waits across the whole of 2015 – fewer than now occur in a single day. Helen Morgan, health and social care spokesman for the Lib Dems, urged Health Secretary Wes Streeting to devise an emergency plan to tackle the 'shocking and dangerous' A&E waiting times, saying the Government 'looks to be asleep at the wheel'. She said it must include an immediate increase in the number of hospital beds to bring occupancy rates down to a safe level, typically considered to be 85 per cent. The RCEM said it currently stands at 93 per cent, meaning the NHS needs a further 9,471. An average of 12,591 hospital beds in England were filled each day last week with patients considered medically fit for discharge but unable to leave. Many will have been waiting for a place in a care home or for care to be arranged in their own home. Dr Tim Cooksley, immediate past president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said elderly patients left on corridors come to increased harm, including 'delirium, pressure sores and psychological distress'. He added: 'Patient confidence in the NHS is rapidly deteriorating and this is well founde

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

DailyMailUK /  🏆 7. in UK

NHS EMERGENCY WAITING FLU CRISIS

United Kingdom Latest News, United Kingdom Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

NHS 24 Call Wait Times Surge by Two-ThirdsNHS 24 Call Wait Times Surge by Two-ThirdsAverage wait times to reach the NHS 24 helpline by phone have dramatically increased by 67% in a year, rising from 12 minutes in 2023 to 21 minutes in 2024. A Freedom of Information request revealed that some callers faced waits exceeding four hours, with nearly 105,000 calls abandoned before an operator could respond in the first 10 months of 2024. Scottish Conservative party members criticize the SNP government for neglecting the health service, citing this increase in wait times as evidence of systemic issues.
Read more »

NHS to Offer 18-Week Wait Times and App UpgradeNHS to Offer 18-Week Wait Times and App UpgradeThe UK Prime Minister will unveil plans to reduce NHS (National Health Service) waiting times to 18 weeks by the end of the parliament. Health Secretary Wes Streeting promised a 'wide range of reform' to modernize the struggling healthcare system. This initiative coincides with a major upgrade of the NHS app, allowing patients to access test results, book appointments, and choose their treatment providers.
Read more »

Millions to Wait Months for NHS Treatment Despite 'Radical' ReformsMillions to Wait Months for NHS Treatment Despite 'Radical' ReformsDespite 'radical' reforms to be unveiled by Keir Starmer, millions will continue to face months-long waits for NHS treatment. The Prime Minister will pledge action on waiting lists, outlining measures like seven-day-a-week diagnostic centers, an improved NHS app, and investment in new equipment and treatment centers. However, leaked figures suggest 35% of patients will still face waits over 18 weeks next year, highlighting the challenge of restoring the 18-week standard by the next election.
Read more »

NHS Reforms: Millions Face Months-Long Wait Despite 'Radical' ChangesNHS Reforms: Millions Face Months-Long Wait Despite 'Radical' ChangesThe Prime Minister will unveil 'radical' NHS reforms on Monday, aiming to tackle the record-long waiting lists. However, even with these changes, millions of patients will continue to wait for treatment for months.
Read more »

Dumfries and Galloway Sees Record Wait for Chronic Pain AppointmentsDumfries and Galloway Sees Record Wait for Chronic Pain AppointmentsThe number of people in Dumfries and Galloway enduring chronic pain and waiting for a clinic appointment has reached a record high. Over half of those being seen have waited more than 40 weeks, with some exceeding a year. NHS Dumfries and Galloway attributes the problem to staff shortages.
Read more »

NHS Scotland maintenance backlog hits 'staggering' record of £1.3bnNHS Scotland maintenance backlog hits 'staggering' record of £1.3bnA Freedom of Information request showed that the maintenance backlog had hit record levels.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-02-12 18:46:31