Hospital declares critical incident as A&E department is 'very full'

881     0
Derriford Hospital declared the critical incident on Sunday (Image: BPM MEDIA)
Derriford Hospital declared the critical incident on Sunday (Image: BPM MEDIA)

A hospital has declared a critical as it struggles to cope with high demand in its Accident and Emergency department.

The incident is the fourth declared by the University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust so far in 2024. Bosses made the decision on Sunday as a result of to high occupancy and people were urged to call 111 if their emergency is not life threatening.

In a statement on its website, Derriford Hospital said: “We have declared a critical incident. This is due to high occupancy within the hospital.

“Our Emergency Department is currently very full and if you do not have an emergency or life-threatening condition, you may be redirected to other healthcare services. These include NHS 111, our Urgent Treatment Centre at the Cumberland centre, and our Minor Injury Units at Kingsbridge and Tavistock. You may also be advised to use local pharmacies or to contact your GP.

“Our colleagues are working hard to prioritise patients based on their clinical need and move patients to the right place for them as soon as possible. If you have a very serious or life-threatening emergency, we are here for you, but otherwise, if you need urgent care, we ask you please to call NHS 111 or use NHS 111 online.

Teachers, civil servants and train drivers walk out in biggest strike in decade eiqekidqxiqktinvTeachers, civil servants and train drivers walk out in biggest strike in decade

"Please use our Emergency Department if you have a life-threatening emergency. Please be aware our service, like the wider NHS and local health and care system, is very busy."

The first critical incident was declared on January 5 and lasted several days. The next came on January 22 lasting eight days, followed by a third on February 7.

Those with minor illnesses are urged to visit local GP surgeries or pharmacies. Last month it was reported more than 1.5million patients waited 12 hours or more after arriving at A&E in England in the past year. Hospital chiefs last night warned that ministers urgently need to draw up a plan to fix the over-stretched health service.

Figures uncovered by the Liberal Democrats show that 1,540,945 people waited 12 hours before being admitted, transferred or discharged in the 12 months to the end of last month. This equates to almost one in ten (9.6%) patients, five times higher than the NHS requirement that no more than 2% of patients should wait 12 hours or more from their time of arrival at A&E.

Last month saw the worst figures with a record 177,805, facing A&E waits longer than that time, which works out at 12.4% of patients. At Blackpool Teaching Hospitals, over one in four (26.3%) patients in January faced A&E delays of 12 hours or more, the worst in the country.

Kelly-Ann Mills

Plymouth, Hospitals, NHS

Read more similar news:

01.02.2023, 00:01 • Finance
Greggs, Costa & Pret coffees have 'huge differences in caffeine', says report
01.02.2023, 00:58 • News
Baby boy has spent his life in hospital as doctors are 'scared' to discharge him
01.02.2023, 12:12 • Politics
Do you support workers going on strike? Take our poll
01.02.2023, 12:40 • Politics
Sunak branded 'pathetic' for attempt to pin blame on Labour for mass strikes
01.02.2023, 13:13 • News
A twitching eye can sometimes be serious - signs, symptoms and when to see a GP
01.02.2023, 18:05 • News
Major UK hospital declares critical incident as struggling A&E department 'full'
01.02.2023, 21:13 • News
Butcher breast surgeon could have hundreds more victims after old database found
02.02.2023, 09:40 • News
Surprising symptom that 40% of women suffer weeks before a heart attack
02.02.2023, 09:43 • Politics
100,000 nurses and patients sign letter to Rishi Sunak calling for NHS wage rise
02.02.2023, 09:44 • News
Mum slams hospital after baby left disabled - 11 years later NHS admits fault