Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Weely News Article 6

Patient on stretcher

The NHS in England has missed its four-hour A&E wait target for the past three months with performance dropping to its lowest level for a decade.
Just 91.8% of patients were seen in four hours between January and March - below the 95% target. That is the worst three-month performance since the target was introduced at the end of 2004. The figures were widely expected as the weekly performance has been below 95% since September.
Graph

What does the target measure?

The four hours covers the point from a patient arriving at A&E to when they are either discharged, transferred to another part of the NHS or admitted into hospital for further treatment. It was introduced at the end of 2004 in England when the NHS was told it had to see 98% of patients in four hours. That was relaxed to 95% in 2010 on the advice of doctors - they argued the pressure to hit the target was distorting decision-making.
The rest of the UK also expects hospitals to see 95% of patients in four hours - although in Scotland it is an interim target with the aim of getting 98% of patients seen in that timeframe. It is the third time the target - it is officially measured on a quarterly basis - has been missed under the coalition. Other parts of the UK have also been missing the target during winter.

Figures released in Scotland showed that in the 12 months up to the end of February 92% of patients were seen in four hours. Monthly waiting times have been even worse in Northern Ireland and Wales, although the latest yearly figures are not yet available.
don't personally know why these targets have been missed but I believe they need to be working to solve the problem. Whether they hire more staff or have one doctor/nurse per patient they need to become more efficient with their timings. However I think a problem for A&E is that people go to A&E for problems that aren't very serious e.g. someone is drunk and take up the doctors time when they could be dealing with more serious matters.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.