Tag Archive: waiting times


Hospitals are fiddling a four-hour A&E wait target by using other wards as dumping grounds, the Conservatives say. Data from 114 NHS trusts in England found many patients faced long waits in assessment units which did not count towards the waiting time. Over a fifth of units reported keeping patients longer than the recommended 24 hours with the average wait being 17. Doctors agreed the system was being abused in places, but the government said the research was “misleading”.

The Conservatives asked hospitals to provide data on their use of these wards under the Freedom of Information Act.We expect assessment units to be used to improve patient care, not as a ‘holding area’ or to avoid breaching the A&E four-hour standard. The units are commonly known as emergency assessment or clinical decision units. They effectively act as a half-way house between A&E and hospital to allow patients to continue to be monitored before a decision is taken to continue treating them or discharge them.

Many are mixed-sex and do not have proper beds, leaving patients to rest on trolleys. Shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley said: “Labour complacently claim that they have abolished long waits for patients being admitted to hospitals, but these figures show that all they have really done is fiddle the figures.

It is not the first time the way the target is being met has been criticised. Both the British Medical Association and academics at London’s City University have raised concerns over the last few years about the use of assessment units. John Heyworth, from the College of Emergency Medicine, said the four-hour target, introduced in 2004, was not working as well as people believed it was. “There is a continuing amount of gaming going on,” he said. “We know these areas are being used frequently purely to admit patients to meet the target and quite often they are not properly equipped or staffed.” He adds doctors would like to see more flexibility in the target to allow them to continue monitoring patients for longer than four hours when appropriate.

Nigel Edwards, policy director of the NHS Confederation, which represents hospital trusts, said it was likely patients were being moved to provide more time for tests, as the four-hour target did not give medical staff “very much leeway”.

Health minister Gillian Merron pointed out before Labour came to power patients were facing long waits. She said the Tory figures were “misleading” as some of the units were observational wards which had been designed and equipped to care for patients for a while. But she added: “We expect assessment units to be used to improve patient care, not as a ‘holding area’ or to avoid breaching the A&E four-hour standard.”

It would seem that the NHS is under so much pressure to change to many things at once, no wonder they are overstretched due to the sheer number of people they have to see when they have a mountain of paperwork to complete. So we shouldn’t blame them for attempting to modify procedure so that they appear to conform to the standards set by the government as they are aware that they risk funding being reduced if they don’t conform.

The credit crunch has hit private healthcare organisations, pretty hard as it has forced alot of people to return to the NHS for treatment; as they can’t afford to pay to receive the treatment privately. It is estimated that the 25% of the population who paid for private healthcare has declined to approximately 16% and experts estimate that this will continue to decline in the current economic crisis. The number of cosmetic procedures carried out has fallen as the banks are refusing loans, so people are unable to raise substantial funds to cover the cost of the procedures. To give you some idea of the scale of the problem in 2008, 215,000 self-pay customers spent £515million on private treatments, of which £170million went on cosmetic surgery. A fifth of bank loans are taken out to fund cosmetic surgery and experts said that they were now much harder to get.

Private healthcare professionals blame not only the credit crunch but also the reduction in NHS waiting times for a decline in their business. According to Spire Healthcare, one of the UKs biggest private providers, those who would normally pay for procedures were delaying treatment. Another private organisation BMI Healthcare, noted demand had fallen, particularly for operations such as hip and knee replacements.

So after an increase in the privatisation of healthcare it seems that the situation is being reversed as a result of the credit crunch, however it is possible that after the credit crunch has been resolved that the situation may revert back to private healthcare becoming more popular again.