A fediverse THREAD on latest NHS situation in England: Ambluance times, A&E, Waiting lists...

1/

Ambulance wait times across the board are the worst they've been for a very long time.

Graph shows category "C2" - not quite life or death, but potentially. Target is 18 minutes wait, but average is now over an hour. Almost 80 minutes in the Midlands and the SW. 2/

Once you get to A&E, waits to be seen are longer than ever. 31% of people now wait longer than 4 hours (target is 5%!).

Unsurprisingly about 5-6% of people leave before being seen - some of those really needed to be seen.

Over 8% of people wait longer than *12 hours* - up from basically 0% pre pandemic.
3/

One of the big issues causing these long waits is that hospitals are full and finding it difficult to discharge people ready to go - often frail older people who have nowhere safe to go with a broken social care system.

About 25% of beds in general wards are occupied by adults otherwise fit to be discharged.

Just since April this year, that's an extra 300,000 days in hospital for patients staying at least a week longer than doctors thought they needed to. 4/

Of course, many people aren't even getting in to hospital for either inpatient or outpatient care.

1.5 million people are waiting for diagnostic tests (30% longer than 6 weeks).

Over 7 million people (1 in 8 of entire population) are waiting for treatment - the highest number ever. 5/

In terms of people waiting longer than 6 weeks for diagnostic tests by type of test, these are all important tests to determine potentially serious issues. The target is 2% across the board. None of the test types are near that target. 6/

This is even affecting cancer services, where waits have been steadily increasing since the start of the pandemic.

25% of patients are now waiting longer than the target of 2 weeks to see a specialist after urgent GP referral. 7/

And finally... what is increasingly a broken health care system is - unsurprisingly - having an effect on the health of our population. Adding to the considerable number of people who report being severely affected by Long Covid (ONS reckons about 340K as of Oct 2022).

The number of working aged people economically inactive because of ill health - already increasing pre-2020 - is going up ever faster.

This is bad news for them, bad news for the NHS and bad news for our economy. 8/

The situation in mental health is also appalling. Our local A&Es are full of extremely mentally unwell patients on s136 of the MHA awaiting beds, looked after by police in the interim as there is no secure environment for them. The ones in a&e not on s136 (and therefore with no police) but in need of admission under the MHA are even worse off. We have had several awful incidents of people leaving A&E before a bed was found and harming themselves severely this week.