Please find a local template on new NHS statistics released today.
The figures cover A&E by Hospital Trust and Ambulances by Ambulance Service. Please use the respective tabs to enter the data.
This template is for England only.
A&E wait times through the roof with [A&E Tab - INSERT FIGURE - Column F] waiting over 12 hours
New figures released today (12/01/23) have revealed the extent of the NHS crisis in [AREA].
In [HOSPITAL - A&E Tab - Column C], [INSERT FIGURE - A&E Tab - Column E] people waited over 4 hours to be seen in December. Even more alarmingly, [INSERT FIGURE - A&E Tab - Column F] waited over 12 hours to be seen in December during the winter crisis.
Meanwhile, the average ambulance response time for the most urgent incidents in [AMBULANCE SERVICE - Column B] was [INSERT FIGURE - Ambulance Tab - Category 1 - Column D] in December – well in excess of the NHS target of 7 minutes.
Response times for urgent conditions such as heart attacks and strokes are even longer. Ambulance response times in [AMBULANCE SERVICE - Column B] for these Category 2 emergencies are now [INSERT FIGURE - Ambulance Tab - Category 2 - Column H], way above the 18-minute target.
The Liberal Democrats have set out a five-point plan to tackle the ambulance service crisis. The party is demanding the Government release the money they promised to help discharge patients from hospitals, as soon as possible.
[NAME], Liberal Democrat Councillor for [AREA] said:
“The Government’s failure to tackle the crisis in our NHS is letting down people in [AREA] and putting patients’ lives at risk. How much more evidence do Ministers need? They either don’t care or just can’t grasp the scale of this problem.
“Unacceptable and heartbreaking delays mean the Government is falling far short even on its own targets.
“Far too many people in [AREA] are having to wait far too long to get the treatment they need. In many cases, this is literally a matter of life or death. People in our area deserve far better.
“Our NHS isn't just at breaking point - it’s splitting at its very seams. We need action from the Conservatives. Liberal Democrats are demanding the Government release the money they promised to help discharge patients from hospitals, and launch a campaign to recruit the extra paramedics and ambulance staff we need.”
ENDS
Notes to editors
Local Ambulance and A&E Wait Times: Ambulance and A&E Statistics - Dec 2022 - Local Release
Ambulance Crisis - 5 Point Winter Plan
Launch a campaign to retain, recruit and train paramedics and other ambulance service staff.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Ambulance categories and targets
These figures refer to Category 1 incidents: An immediate response to a life threatening condition, such as cardiac or respiratory arrest. The NHS target is an average response time to these incidents of seven minutes, and for 90 per cent of them to be responded to within 15 minutes.
Source: Ambulance waiting times.
A&E targets
Four-hour A&E waiting time target is a pledge set out in the Handbook to the NHS Constitution. The operational standard is that at least 95 per cent of patients attending A&E should be admitted, transferred or discharged within four hours.