Responding to NHS England’s weekly urgent and emergency care situation report Rory Deighton, director of the NHS Confederation’s Acute Network, said:
“It is clear that the NHS remains under an incredible amount of pressure, with flu and norovirus at their highest levels so far this winter and nearly 50,000 staff absent each day last week.
“But this is exacerbated by the patient flow problems running through health and care systems from ambulance handover delays at A&E to patients stuck in hospital when they are well enough to leave. The focus on ambulance handovers this winter has meant NHS leaders and their staff have put in an incredible amount of work to keep patients safe, but ongoing issues in social care keeping patients from being discharged from hospital have not gone away.
“Our members are concerned that the funding pressure across local government is leaving them unable to offer care packages to help people move out of hospital.
“With further reports of local authorities facing financial crisis there needs to be a continued focus on supporting councils and funding social care so that we can support the domiciliary care sector to manage the demand it is facing and ease the pressure on hospitals.
“The worsening of ambulance handover delays, increase in bed occupancy and delayed discharge problems shows that the hospitals are struggling to get patients through the front door and out the back. This is causing further delays for patients and frustrating staff who have already worked flat out through the pandemic and a year of industrial action and want to provide the best care possible to patients.”
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