WARNINGS have been issued that Scotland’s NHS is “heading for a summer of chaos” as the number of patients forced to wait longer than four hours at A&E has grown to the highest on record.
Statistics from Public Health Scotland show that flagship hospitals in Scotland’s two biggest cities continued to struggle, with only 41.9 per cent of patients waiting less than four hours at both Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University and the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh.
Delayed discharge has remained at a high level, with 52,914 bed days lost over May 2022 - a 50% increase compared to the same month in May 2021. The number of planned operations was still 20.8% lower than pre-pandemic levels.
Data shows that 8,993 people waited more than four hours in emergency departments in the week up to June 26.
The previous high was seen in the week up to March 20, when 8,631 patients were waiting longer than four hours – the Scottish Government’s target time for patients to be assessed and discharged or admitted.
During the same week, 2,647 people waited more than eight hours while 1,043 people waited more than 12 hours.
The latest figures show that in the week up to June 26 one third of people waited more than four hours.
Just 67.5% of the 27,646 attendances were seen in the time frame, short of the 95% government target.
That figure decreased slightly from 68.1% the previous week.
Similar figures for the month of May showed more than a quarter (73%) of people waiting longer than the target time.
Some 9,953 people (7.4%) waited longer than eight hours while 3,284 patients (2.5%) were in emergency departments longer than 12 hours.
Scottish Labour health spokesperson, Jackie Baillie, said: “The facts are clear – despite the heroic efforts of NHS staff, our NHS is heading for a summer of chaos.
“Waiting lists are unacceptably long, delayed discharge remains stubbornly high and vital operations are being cancelled on a daily basis.
“Staff are working tirelessly around the clock, but lives are being put at risk due to the SNP’s failure to support the NHS."
She added: “When the focus of the entire government should be on tackling the crisis in the NHS, the SNP is shamefully returning to the arguments of the past.
“The NHS is entirely controlled by the SNP. Shouting about separation will not help a single patient be seen quicker or save a single life.”
Scottish Tory health spokesman Dr Sandesh Gulhane said the fact that waiting times were getting worse in the summer, when they should be improving, was a “measure of the scale of the crisis”.
He said: “It’s simply unacceptable that a third of patients are having to wait more than four hours to be seen – and that almost a thousand people in the space of a week waited at least half a day – because we know that excess delays lead to needless deaths.
“The buck stops with Humza Yousaf, who is letting down dedicated frontline staff and patients alike.
“His flimsy Covid Recovery Plan isn’t fit for purpose, while – as the outgoing chair of BMA Scotland pointed out last week – the SNP’s woeful workforce planning meant our emergency wards were understaffed before, during and after the pandemic.”
Scottish Lib Dem leader Alex Cole-Hamilton said the Scottish Government has shifted its focus to “an unwanted independence referendum”, adding that “patients and staff alike are being taken for granted”.
A spokesman for the Scottish Government said: “The number of Covid inpatients in hospital is rising and having a detrimental impact on delays in A&E.
“Despite these pressures, nearly two-thirds of patients are being seen in our A&E departments within the four-hour target.”
He added: “We continue to see high levels of Covid transmission and people in hospitals with the virus which is resulting in reduced capacity in our hospitals and staff absence.
“We encourage people to think carefully before going to an emergency department and for many A&E will not be the right place for their healthcare need.
“People should consider whether their condition is an emergency, such as a stroke, heart attack or major trauma. NHS 24 is available for those who think they need A&E but it is not an emergency.
“Scotland continues to have the best performing A&Es in the UK, outperforming those in England, Wales and Northern Ireland for over six years.”
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