Crammed wards, burnt-out GPs, patients waiting hours for ambulances – the health service is at breaking point

Inside the dimly lit command centre at King’s College hospital, staff arriving for the first beds meeting of the day are greeted with a warning: the hospital is already under strain. “So, we are under pressure this morning,” the head of nursing, Naomi Hosking, informs colleagues stood around her in a semi-circle. No one registers surprise. “We’ve got a lot of patients in ED [emergency department] with little space to see new patients, so we need to get some early movement.”

It’s 8.32am and ED – maximum capacity 60 – is packed, with 61 patients inside. The oldest is 98; the youngest 30 days old. Later, that pressure will intensify: the number of ED patients – in beds, on trolleys or in chairs – will more than double to 137.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘Short, fat, ugly’: Gucci family lashes out at cast appearance in new film

Ridley Scott biopic tells story of Patrizia Reggiani’s doomed marriage to Maurizio…

Drought threatens UK government’s mass forestry scheme

Tree project is central to net zero plan, international conference in London…

Artist Paula Rego, known for her visceral and unsettling work, dies aged 87

Celebrated Portuguese-born British artist died peacefully after short illness, says Victoria Miro…