Commenting today (01 January) on the current situation in urgent and emergency care and the need for a four nation plan, Dr Tim Cooksley, president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said: “The current situation in urgent and emergency care is shocking. It is in a critical state for patients and it is an extremely difficult for healthcare staff who are unable to deliver the care they want to.
“Political leaders across the UK need to listen, meet urgently and accept the need to declare a national NHS major incident.
“The outcome must be a four nation emergency strategy which results in short-term stabilisation, medium-term improvement and long-term growth – the grave situation we are in means it will be a long journey.
“Sustainable workforce and capacity plans are required urgently to boost morale among staff and patients – as we have long called for – and we now need to see action.
“The problems in the system are not new news – SAM and many other medical colleges and bodies first outlined in 2020 that urgent and emergency care in the NHS needed transforming immediately following learning from the pandemic.
“This included recommendations at the time which remain pertinent but have now been updated and are designed to provide interventions which are deliverable despite the current constraints and offer the best hope of interim solutions.
“These cover, among other things, increased investment in primary care, social care, mental health and ambulance services and quick-access phone lines for communication between secondary and primary care.
“There must be a seven-day range of healthcare options to which NHS 111 and primary care can direct patients and hospitals must urgently expand same day emergency care (SDEC) – delivered by acute medical teams – for patients referred from primary care and NHS 111.
“Patients with specialty hospital referrals need a rapid response and a treatment plan that minimises unnecessary admission to improve flow and prevent delays so they can be moved from ambulances quickly and treated in safe areas
“Diagnostic and support services must be available seven days a week to maintain patient flow and local healthcare systems must expand community care.
“Discharge planning should commence on admission and be optimised so that patients discharged from hospital are transferred to an environment with tailored support for their health and care at an appropriate time of the day.
“This is a time of crisis and there are fears this will worsen further over the coming months, so leaders must prioritise those improvements we can make now that will help us to navigate this turbulent period.”
Read more at https://www.rcp.ac.uk/file/42601/download