1/21 Parliament votes on the new tiered restctions on Tuesday. A lot of comment in today’s papers on what’s happening in the hospital sector. Important questions on NHS capacity, demand, preparedness, Nightingales etc. Thread below sets out NHS hospital trust perspective.
2/21 Have deliberately concentrated in thread on hospitals as this is where current public debate ahead of Tuesday’s vote is. But many of same issues apply to community, mental health and ambulance trusts, all of whom are under the same current level of pressure as hospitals.
3/21 Running a hospital at the moment is much more complex & difficult than normal due to COVID-19. That often doesn’t show up in usual national data that some are currently quoting (e.g. NHS capacity levels below last year / not under real pressure so where's the problem?)
4/21 Remember pre-covid starting context. NHS already had large demand supply mismatch. Insufficient hospital beds. 100,000 staff vacancies. Despite frontline efforts, worst A&E/elective surgery performance in a decade. Huge overstretch in winter (late Dec-Feb) for last 5 yrs.
5/21 COVID-19 then made task massively more difficult in number of ways. Need to treat three sets of patients - COVID-19; planned care with urgent/important backlog cases from first phase of covid that simply can’t wait any longer; and usual emergency patients needing treatment.
6/21 Infection control requirements and workforce impact of covid-19 mean juggling this workload complex and difficult. Brilliant new Hospital series – first three episodes here: bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08… - shows scale of challenge. Anyone commenting on hospitals should watch it.
7/21 Infection control mean hospitals have to create three separate areas: red for covid, amber for patients waiting for test results and green for non covid. Amount of lost capacity will vary by trust but all hospitals reporting capacity loss of somewhere between 5 and 20%.
8/21 Meanwhile, ensuring patient flow for elective surgery has become much more complicated. Myriad reasons. Need for patient testing/pre-isolation. Demand for theatre space hugely outstripping supply. Surgery slower due to need to don, doff and work in cumbersome PPE..
9/21 ..Then, as soon as number of covid patients rises, wards have to be turned from elective surgery recovery into covid wards. Despite massive efforts to use every single ounce of capacity available including private sector and working collaboratively with neighbouring trusts.
10/21 Then layer workforce issues on top. NHS staff reflect communities they serve. Trusts in areas of high infection rates lose large numbers of staff to covid/self isolation/looking after family. If key worker on pathway (e.g. anaesthetist) off, other staff's work at risk.
11/21 When covid cases increase, staff have to be transferred from other duties to look after covid patients. Some trusts in areas of high covid infection are therefore having to leave some beds unoccupied as they don't have sufficient people to safely staff them.
12/21 Much of this will not show up in national hospital demand/bed occupancy data. That data is of questionable use anyway in debate on social contact restrictions. It’s national data that takes no account of large regional variation in numbers of covid patients in hospitals.
13/21 In the words of one trust CEO last week “it’s so frustrating that people can’t see the reality that today's 85% bed occupancy is equivalent to normal 95% bed occupancy. We’re going absolutely full pelt with exhausted staff and haven’t even reached winter yet”.
14/21 Two other issues. ICU capacity by itself is not a good indicator of hospital pressures, as some are arguing. ICU beds account for a small proportion of a hospital’s total bed base. And many more covid patients are now being treated on general wards without mech ventilators.
15/21 Widespread misunderstanding about purpose of Nightingales. Always intended as last resort insurance policy to avoid overwhelm. Not purpose built hospitals & only staffed by taking staff from existing hospitals. NHS would always want to use existing hospital capacity first
16/21 …Patient experience in Nightingale inevitably worse. Diverting staff to Nightingales will inevitably reduce quality of care in existing hospitals. So, wrong to suggest that current position of not systematically using Nightingales is indicator NHS has sufficient capacity.
17/21 What does all this mean? Although current national level data on bed occupancy/hospital demand not dangerously high, this is not a good guide to how pressured hospitals are. And it’s certainly no indicator of how busy hospitals could be in peak winter – the key issue.
18/21 Hospital leaders clear their trusts already at full stretch. And they're unlikely to be able to cope if a third surge of covid patients in January coincides with surge in emergency demand (e.g. respiratory illness/broken bones from slipping over) normally seen in winter.
19/21 They're desperate to avoid reducing planned care – the usual response to demand overload in winter. They know how important it is to treat those whose care has been delayed from the first phase. They know that lives genuinely are at risk if they do delay that care.
20/21 Combination of vaccines, mass scale rapid turnaround testing and therapeutic drugs genuinely offer way out of current covid challenges in late Spring / early Summer. But, in meantime, particularly this winter, restricting social contact only way of cutting covid spread.
21/21 This is why trust leaders are clear that Govt & parliament should err on side of caution in setting restrictions on social contact. Trust leaders adamant that it's their job to treat all patients who need care and reducing number of covid patients only way to ensure this.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Clearly heard the frustrations from some GPs when I posted three weeks ago on where the NHS is up to. New long🧵recognising and celebrating the central role that GPs and their teams play in the NHS in England. And some perspectives on the frustrations that I heard. 1/x.
GPs/general practice are vital to the effective functioning of the NHS. They’re a key first point of contact to diagnose whether further care is needed and, if so, what care is required. They provide vital continuity of care for patients managing chronic long-term conditions. 2/x
They play a key role in preventive care conducting routine health screenings & vaccinations and identifying/managing risk factors, preventing development of serious diseases. GPs act as key triage point for specialised care, ensuring this care is accessed when most needed...3/x
Lots of comment on @NHSPracHealth support service. For clarity. @NHS England is committed to ensuring all NHS staff receive the mental health support they need. The vast majority of this provision is, and always has been, via their employer’s health and wellbeing schemes... 1/x
...There is no change to those services. Given the dispersed nature of Primary Care, the existing Practitioner Health service for doctors in Primary Care will continue as a single, NHS England commissioned, national service. 2/x
We are reviewing the current Practitioner Health service that is provided for doctors and senior managers in secondary care, as part of a wider review to ensure that all NHS staff groups have the support they need. 3/x
Latest British Social Attitudes Survey on public views of health and care published last week: . Data from Sept-Oct 2023, last Autumn. This has understandably triggered debate about where the NHS is up to. Some thoughts. New thread 🧵1/xnuffieldtrust.org.uk/research/publi…
Good to see public commitment to underlying principles of NHS as strong as ever. 91% support for NHS being free of charge. 82% for NHS being primarily funded through taxation. And 82% for service being available to everyone. But overall satisfaction has fallen to 24%. 2/x
Like every advanced healthcare system in world, the NHS is recovering from the effects of the worst pandemic in a century. NHS achieved some extraordinary things during covid - world leading vaccination campaign; anti virals; meeting unprecedented critical care demand but.. 3/x
Proud to be @NHSEngland exec sponsor for @NHSMuslimNet. Completed my #NHSRamadanChallenge last Thursday – fasting (no food or liquid) between 0505 & 1933. I learnt a lot along the way which I thought it would be worth sharing in one of my tweet threads. New thread 🧵. 1/24
I’ve deliberately set out information on Ramadan first (about which I knew very little) and then shared my personal experience of the impact of fasting on me. Recognising that I only fasted for one day and fasting for a whole month over all of Ramadan is very different. 2/24
Ramadan is the 9th month in the Islamic calendar and one of the holiest months in the year for Muslims. As the Islamic calendar is based around the lunar calendar, Ramadan rotates by c.10 days each year. It isn't clear, in advance, exactly when it falls (see below/attached) 3/24
@UKHSA data today marks significant milestone. Since start of pandemic NHS has treated over one million hospital patients with COVID-19. Although we've returned, in many ways, to pre-pandemic ways of living and working, NHS still has major challenges from COVID. New🧵1/18
Firstly, on @mariecurieuk’s #DayOfReflection, I want to remember those who have lost loved relatives and friends over the course of the pandemic. Important we remember them appropriately. Particularly thinking of NHS staff who lost their life in line of duty. 2/18.
Since 2020 NHS has managed a series of successive waves of COVID. Between then and now, the number of inpatients with COVID has fluctuated between 3,800 and 16,500. During the height of the pandemic, we were admitting 8 hospitals’ worth of patients per day due to COVID. 3/18
Polling out today from @IpsosUK & @HealthFdn shows an interesting picture. Concern about current pressures on NHS given record demand, but public’s commitment to the founding values of the service — almost 75 years on — are as strong as ever. 🧵 👇health.org.uk/publications/l… 1/13
Given huge pressure on services and the backlog built up over Covid, unsurprising that public confidence in NHS services in the short term has fallen. We have set out clearly how we will improve elective and urgent care. Plan to improve access to primary care next. 2/13
But polling shows there’s also overwhelming support for underlying principle of free healthcare for all — 90% of people think NHS should be free at the point of delivery. And, at the same time, 89% think the NHS should provide a comprehensive service available for everyone. 3/13