Parliament should be recalled over NHS crisis

3 Jan 2023
Helen Morgan with local ambulances

Helen Morgan has called for Parliament to be recalled immediately amid estimates that 500 people each week are dying due to A&E delays.

The Liberal Democrats are demanding the Government pass an emergency health plan and declare a “national major incident”.

In recent days ambulance services across the country have declared “critical incidents”, while ambulance staff have also been urged to conserve oxygen supplies due to a surge in demand.

Despite the lowest number of New Year 999 calls in the history of West Midlands Ambulance Service, ambulances continue to queue outside hospitals across the region due to “extreme” pressure on hospitals and the social care system.

Some routine operations in Shropshire are being cancelled as a result, with patients urged to avoid A&Es in Shrewsbury or Telford unless their condition is life-threatening.

Helen Morgan wants Parliament to be recalled so that the Government can take urgent action to stop people from dying.

Helen Morgan, Liberal Democrat MP for North Shropshire, said: “This is a life or death situation for huge numbers of patients across the country, including here in North Shropshire.

“The NHS is collapsing in front of our eyes but the Prime Minister and Health Secretary are nowhere to be seen.

“Every week I hear from people who are in shock after calling an ambulance or visiting A&E only to learn that ‘emergency’ care now means waiting hours and hours and hours.

“This is a national crisis and the country will never forgive the Government for failing to act while hundreds of people die in parked ambulances or hospital corridors.

“Nobody should lose a loved one because the Government is asleep on the job.

“Paramedics, nurses and doctors have been left high and dry by the Government. They need help right now before more people die.

“I am calling for Parliament to return without delay. The Prime Minister must declare a major incident to put the NHS back on a pandemic-style footing amid soaring numbers of deaths.”

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Notes

The President of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s comments that up to 500 people each week are dying nationally due to A&E delays can be found here.

Ambulance Crisis - Liberal Democrat 5 Point Winter Plan

  1. Launch a campaign to retain, recruit and train paramedics and other ambulance service staff. Like all health and care services, it needs to be properly staffed.
  2. Bring forward a fully funded programme to get people who are medically well enough discharged from hospital and set up with appropriate social care and support. This will allow people to leave hospital sooner and make more space available for new arrivals.

The Government’s current attempt at this through the Adult Social Care Discharge Fund is not good enough, as the funds will come from existing NHS budgets putting even more pressure on other services. It will also not be deployed in full until January next year.

  1. In addition to getting people out of hospital so that they get care in a more comfortable setting, the number of beds in hospitals needs to be increased to end excessive handover delays for ambulances, caused by a lack of bed capacity. Any new beds must come with increases in staff to care for those extra patients.
  2. Expand mental health support services to get people the appropriate care they need and reduce the number of call outs for ambulances for mental health reasons. Learning from hospitals that have set up ‘emergency mental health departments’, will not only to get people more appropriate care but relieve pressure on A&Es and ambulances.
  3. Pass Daisy Cooper MP’s Ambulance Waiting Times Bill into law that would require  accessible, localised reports of ambulance response times to be published. This would ensure that ‘hot spots’ with some of the longest waiting times can be identified routinely. 12 hour waits at A&E should also be published from arrival at hospital rather than the ‘decision to admit’ as is current practice, so that the true scale of the problem is clear for all to see.

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