In a significant move aimed at improving patient care and alleviating hospital pressures, the National Health Services (NHS) has expanded its same day
emergency care services across the UK.
This has resulted in thousands more individuals receiving rapid tests and treatment, effectively avoiding overnight hospital stays.
Recent data paints a promising picture, revealing an 11 per cent increase in the number of patients discharged on the same day they were admitted as emergencies.
This advancement translates to several patients receiving urgent care within hours, subsequently freeing up beds for others in need.
Over the past year alone, an impressive 206,446 more patients have been discharged on the same day, amounting to 2,024,129 individuals in the year leading up to
January 2024, compared to 1,817,683 in the preceding year.
The successful rollout of same day emergency care to every hospital in England has played a pivotal role in easing bed congestion and reducing hospital admissions
by up to 30 per cent in certain NHS Trusts.
NHS moves a step ahead towards its efforts to address covid-19 backlogs by opening a new 'planned care' hospital in Berkshire dedicated to non-emergency treatment.
Heatherwood Hospital in Ascot, part of Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, will focus on cutting waits for routine care with staff prioritising patients who have been waiting longest, including for orthopaedic and ophthalmology services.
The hospital houses six operating theatres, 48 inpatient beds and 22 day-case cubicles and provides surgical, diagnostic and outpatient care, and will treat patients
across Berkshire, Hampshire and Surrey.
There will also be a range of outpatient services under the same roof including gynaecology, urology and cardiology services. These will be supported by services
offering patients endoscopy, physiotherapy, phlebotomy and radiology checks and treatments.