Covid-19: Surge leaves key hospital services 'in crisis'

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The surge in Covid hospital cases has left key hospital services in England in crisis, doctors are warning.

NHS data showed A&Es were facing rising delays admitting extremely sick patients on to wards.

Meanwhile, the total number of people facing year-long waits for routine treatments is now more than 100 times higher than it was before the pandemic.

Cancer experts are also warning the disruption to their services was "terrifying" and would cost lives.

Reports have emerged of hospitals cancelling urgent operations - London's King's College Hospital has stopped priority two treatments, which are those that need to be done within 28 days.

And Birmingham's major hospital trust has temporarily suspended most liver transplants.

It comes after a surge in Covid patients in recent weeks.

One in three patients in hospital have the virus - and at some sites it is more than half.

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NHS England medical director Prof Stephen Powis said the NHS was facing an "exceptionally tough challenge", adding services would continue to be under pressure until the virus was under control.

But he stressed non-Covid treatment was still happening - with three times as many diagnostic tests and twice as many operations being carried out than in the spring when the pandemic first hit.

How are services affected?

The data published by NHS England showed the scale of the impact from dealing with Covid on key hospital services.

The data published on Thursday showed:

  • Nearly 90,000 patients - one in four - admitted to hospital via A&E waited more than four hours for a bed to be found
  • This included a record 3,745 who waited more than 12 hours
  • There was a record 4.46 million on the waiting list for routine treatment, including knee and hip operations
  • More than 192,000 have waited more than one year - in February, before the pandemic started, the figure stood at 1,600
  • Staff have had to be redeployed into critical care after rising Covid cases forced hospitals to increase the number of intensive care beds by a quarter since November
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The figures for cancer date back to November, before the surge in cases.

At that point, the number of urgent cancer check-ups and treatments being started was at normal levels.

But since then, concerns have been raised that services have been reduced.

Prof Pat Price, of the Catch Up With Cancer campaign, said services were facing the "biggest crisis" of her 30-year career.

"This is a truly terrifying scenario," she added.

And the Royal College of Surgeons warned the pandemic was having a "calamitous impact" on waiting times for planned surgery.

Sarah Scobie, from the Nuffield Trust think tank, said services were under "intolerable strain", adding "the worst is yet to come".

Saffron Cordery, of NHS Providers, which represents hospital bosses, agreed: "The next few weeks are no doubt going to be the most testing in NHS history."