Over 555 patients in Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust waited over 24 hours to be admitted to hospital at A&E last year
Over 555 patients in Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust waited over 24 hours to be admitted to hospital at A&E last year
- 555 patients waited over 24 hours to be admitted to hospital at A&E in Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust last year
- 472 patients over 65 in Portsmouth faced waits of 24 hours or more in 2023
- Liberal Democrats warn the government’s failure to tackle the social care crisis is behind devastating delays facing elderly patients at A&E
555 patients waited over 24 hours at A&E before being admitted to hospital at Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust last year, Liberal Democrat Freedom of Information (FOI) requests have revealed.
The data showed staggering increases in the number of patients and pensioners waiting more than a day to be admitted to hospital in Portsmouth. In 2019, 3 patients waited over 24 hours to be admitted to hospital following their arrival in A&E. For 2023, that number now stands at a shocking 55, a 18400% increase.
Those aged 65 and over in Havant have also experienced disturbing increases in 24-hour waits. In 2019, 7 over 65s in Portsmouth, and the surrounding area, waited more than a day for a bed, last year this increased to over 472. Of those waiting 24-hours to be admitted to hospital after arriving at A&E last year.
Nationally, 153,000 people waited over 24 hours to be admitted to hospital following their arrival in A&E in 2023. This is a shocking ten-fold increase on the just over 15,000 people who waited over 24 hours in 2019. Of those waiting 24 hours to be admitted to hospital in A&E last year, more than two-thirds were over 65.
The Royal College of Emergency Medicine recently produced an analysis which showed that there were almost 300 excess deaths a week in A&E associated with long delays.
The Liberal Democrats are calling for an end to excessive A&E waits by increasing the number of fully staffed hospital beds, along with a long-term solution to the social care crisis so people aren’t left stuck in hospital waiting for care.
Liberal Democrat Parliamentary Candidate for Havant, Gayathri Sathyanath commented:
“It is appalling that so many people in Havant are being forced to put up with these terrifying waits, as our health service teeters on the brink.
“Behind each one of these figures is a story of someone waiting in pain, worried sick about getting the care they need.
“Doctors and nurses are working incredibly hard to help local people but are being let down by a lack of funding. It is not right that our community is suffering the consequences of this Conservative government’s neglect of local health services.
“These numbers expose the reckless damage done by this Conservative government’s neglect of the NHS and care. We desperately need more hospital beds and a long-term solution to the social care crisis, to end these devastating A&E delays.”