Re: Autumn 2016 | Page 74

71.3% (against a standard target of 75%) of red 1 calls being responded to within 8 minutes. This is the eleventh month in a row that this target has not been met. NHS ‘bulging at the seams’ Official figures published recently for the financial year 2015-16 recorded the deficit for NHS Trusts in England as £2.45bn, this being £461m higher than expected. This overspend has spiralled upwards since the £115m deficit reported for the financial year 2013-14. Controversially, Dr Kailash Chand, deputy chair of the British Medical Association (BMA), has recently stated publicly that “[the] government is deliberately setting up the NHS to fail, that’s clear. The whole agenda of the Tory party is to wash its hands of the NHS. The biggest evidence is that they are starving the NHS of the funding it needs so that eventually they will say that it’s unaffordable.” The BMA held their annual conference earlier this month, where medical practitioners raised their fears for patients’ welfare and the risks patients are being exposed to. Dr Mary McCarthy, a GP from Shropshire, speaking at the conference expressed her concerns at the apparent lack of hospital beds in the UK and how inpatient capacity is steadily being eroded. Dr McCarthy went on to compare the UK’s inpatient capacity, which has less than 300 beds for every 100,000 people, with that of our European counterparts. The Republic of Ireland has around 500 for every 100,000, France over 700 and Germany over 800. Dr McCarthy explained that she believes our hospitals are “bulging at the seams”. 72 Representatives at the BMA conference also heard from speaker Dr Michael Hardingham, an ear, nose and throat surgeon from Cheltenham who put forward his view that “patients are being harmed because they are being sent home as there are no beds available.” He went on to recall working within the NHS in the 1960’s where he was faced with two and sometimes three times the number of cases in a day than he currently sees. A poll carried out by the BMA before the conference found that eight in 10 of the 1,200 representatives surveyed are worried about the future of our NHS. This is hardly surprising with NHS targets increasingly not being met. Waiting times for A&E units saw an all time low in the first quarter of this year. A&E units have a target that 95% of patients are to be seen within 4 hours. However, the Guardian reported last month that in the past 18 months, this 95% target had been met only once. The NHS performance statistics for April 2016 also saw a failure to meet ambulance response times, with only Stephen Dalton, Interi m Chief Executive for NHS Confederation, commenting on the monthly NHS performance figures published by NHS England said: “The NHS is straining to deliver a high standard of care in the face of huge financial and demand pressures. . . This is an urgent call to Government to quicken the pace and enable NHS and Local Authority leaders to work together to transform health and care services. The needs of people have changed and demand continues to outstrip resource. Unless we break the cycle, we will continue to see performance results that expose the problem, not offer any solutions.” The Royal College of Nursing conference which also took place earlier this month heard Janet Youd, the chair of the Royal College of Nursing’s Emergency Care association, raise her concerns that more than half of sick children brought to A&E are not dealt with “in a timely manner”. She added: “There are some emergency departments that I wouldn’t feel safe sending my children or family to.” Janet Davies, Chief Executive and General Secretary for the Royal College of Nursing, recently described the current situation of the NHS as an “endless winter”. She explained: “Having once been the preserve of the worst weeks of winter, overwhelming pressure and major incidents have sadly become the new normal in our hospitals. . . It is time we had a serious look at how long hospitals can continue to function when they are consistently under-funded and understaffed.” Ministers are quick to defend the current state of the NHS by rejecting these claims and pointing out that more money than ever is being invested, meaning that the NHS is the safest health system in the world. They compare present figures to those some six years ago and note that 6,400 extra patients are now being treated in A&E and 16,000 more diagnostic tests are being performed. Ministers note that patient experience has improved in coming years, with 85% of patients reporting that the care they received was ‘good’ or better. However, this does not reflect the views of the medical practitioners who are at the forefront, providing care within the NHS nor those of our clients who have been put at risk and failed by the NHS By Estella Hlisnikowski