Home Business News Six hour ambulance waits will be ‘commonplace’ this winter as the ‘whole of the NHS under pressure’

Six hour ambulance waits will be ‘commonplace’ this winter as the ‘whole of the NHS under pressure’

by LLB staff reporter
19th Oct 21 4:05 pm

A paramedic has warned that the UK is facing a “bleak” few months as people will be waiting for an ambulance for at least six hours this winter.

The “whole of the NHS are under severe pressure” and patients are currently waiting for at least four to six hours and those who suffer a heart attack or a stroke will be the worst affected.

Richard Webber, a paramedic and spokesman for the College of Paramedics, told the PA news agency, “This issue has been bad for a while, hospitals have been so much busier.

“Patients are being admitted and what’s happening is they cannot move them straight into A&E, so ambulances have become cabs waiting to unload outside hospitals.

“Our members are reporting delays of four to six hours in getting to people, which means there can be up to 15 ambulances waiting outside hospitals with patients inside.

“This also creates a backlog of 999 calls. I’m talking (about) up to 300 calls for a service to deal with, leaving people to wait at home potentially in need of serious medical attention.

“Everything is therefore taking longer; staff are dealing with three or four incidents every shift, when they would usually do as many as eight.”

A West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman said, “The whole of the NHS remains under severe pressure; hospital handover delays unfortunately mean patients waiting longer for an ambulance response.

“We are working with all local NHS partners to reduce delays so crews can respond to the next incident as quickly as possible.”

Webber added, “There is a very long winter ahead for us, usually summer is seen as a respite, but this hasn’t been the case this time around so it’s going to feel like one very long winter.

“I believe waits of six hours or more will become commonplace.

“The ones who will be at risk are those left at home potentially injured but unassessed – those who suffer heart attacks and strokes will be even more at risk as there may not be a vehicle nearby to ensure patients get to specialist centres.

“I would say at the moment we are where we usually are in January – in some cases the army is being brought in to support, so what will happen once we reach the peak of winter?

“Winter respiratory problems will get worse – this is all still to come, which is proving to be quite a bleak picture.”

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