free tracking Winter ‘quad-demic’ crisis ‘feels like the pandemic’ – with hospitals ‘full to bursting and patients collapsing in A&E’ – Koko Cafe

Winter ‘quad-demic’ crisis ‘feels like the pandemic’ – with hospitals ‘full to bursting and patients collapsing in A&E’


THE dreaded ‘quad-demic’ has finally hit, with four winter bugs overwhelming NHS hospitals all at once, new figures reveal.

Several A&E departments have been forced to declare ‘critical incidents,’ with many hospitals “full to bursting” as patients collapse in waiting rooms, NHS staff warn.

Blurred photo of NHS hospital ward staff.
PA

Map of NHS trusts that have declared critical incidents.

There were an average of 5,407 flu patients on wards each day in the week to 5 January.

This is up seven per cent from 5,074 the week before and 3.5 times higher than last year.

Covid, RSV, and norovirus cases remain high, with over 1,100 Covid patients in the hospital daily last week.

Norovirus cases hit 626, up nearly 50 per cent from last year, while RSV admissions averaged 72 children a day, a 47 per cent rise.

NHS medical director Professor Sir Stephen Powis said: “It is hard to quantify just how tough it is for frontline staff at the moment.

“Some staff working in A&E say it feels like some of the days we had during the height of the pandemic.”

Brits are being urged to attend A&E alone and wear face masks as doctors warn of “unsafe” care putting lives at risk.

Professor Julian Redhead, NHS England’s director of emergency care, said patients are being treated in corridors and cases could continue to rise as schools go back.

He said: “It’s too early to say it has definitively peaked. 

“I would hope there would be a peak in the next one to two weeks.

“Wards are now full to bursting and that pressure is feeding back into A&E departments, with patients being treated in environments not usually used for clinical care.”

Meanwhile, Lorraine, a nurse in Birmingham, told BBC Radio 4 Live “Patients are collapsing in the waiting room. It’s just hectic.”

“This is happening in A&E up and down the country, all areas,” said Joanne, one nurse working in an emergency ward in Manchester. “A&E is in a desperate situation right now.”

“The government need to take urgent action. We need help,” she said.

Dr Adrian Boyle, the president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said: “Patients are suffering unsafe and ­unacceptable care in what has become a regular winter crisis in an NHS that is not set up to cope with demand.

“Flu adds to the pressure but what we are seeing is not unprecedented — the real problem is that the system has so little resilience.”

Dr Boyle warned: “This is leading to thousands of avoidable deaths every year and the political priority should be dealing with the dangers patients are facing in our emergency departments.”

On Wednesday, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said he was ashamed of the crisis of “patients languishing in hospital corridors”, but says it does not look like it is getting better any time soon.

It comes as scenes of crowded hospitals in China stoked fears of the next Covid with cases of little-known winter virus hMPV surging.

But the World Health Organisation said hMPV was still at normal levels.

Chart comparing symptoms of cold, flu, COVID-19, and RSV.

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