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Waiting times at Lothians A&E departments hit all-time low



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Published Date: 26 August 2008
WAITING times at accident and emergency departments in the Lothians is at an all-time low, new figures released today revealed.
The proportion of people waiting at A&E for less than four hours was 98.2 per cent in June, the best figures ever notched up by NHS Lothian.

It is a dramatic improvement from two years ago, when more than a fifth of patients were waiting for longe
r than four hours.

Although it is 0.1 per cent below the Scottish average, the national picture is obscured by smaller boards like Orkney having a 100 per cent record in meeting Holyrood guidelines, which in turn inflates the national mean.

Figures show that during June, 19,100 people came through the doors of the Capital's A&E departments, with only 352 having to wait longer than the four-hour benchmark.

The statistics showed that NHS Lothian's A&Es performed better than their counterparts in Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Fife, Forth Valley and Lanarkshire, but behind Grampian and Tayside.

James McCaffery, chief operating officer for NHS Lothian, said: "This success is tribute to the hard work of our staff in emergency treatment departments across Lothian."

The 98.2 per cent figure also beats the national guidelines of 98 per cent.

Public health minister Shona Robison said: "Cutting waiting times is a clear priority for this Scottish Government to ensure patients get the treatment they need as quickly as possible. It is also important that they have a clear understanding of when they can expect to receive their treatment and our new ways of publishing waiting time statistics does just that."

The minister added: "The unprecedented levels of transparency offered by the new system means patients are no longer at risk of finding themselves banished to a hidden waiting list.

"Today's statistics, released by ISD Scotland, show an overall impressive performance from the NHS in Scotland, effectively meeting all our challenging national maximum waiting times targets.

"This is very good news for patients but it is not the end of the story."

Meanwhile a 'mystery shopping' style exercise across the country's sexual health clinics also found NHS Lothian to be performing well.

The study involved volunteers reporting to clinics at different times claiming they had symptoms.

Scottish government guidelines dictate that 80 per cent of these cases should be seen to within two working days, and the report found that NHS Lothian clinics had a 100 per cent record in booking appointments within that time.

Dr Anna Glasier, Lead Clinician for NHS Lothian's sexual health services, said: "Sexual health services need to be accessible and available at short notice. Long waits for help could be hazardous where sexually-transmitted infections are involved, and it is good to see that our service has done well in this test."

The news comes as a further boost to sexual health treatment within the Lothians.

On Friday, the Evening News reported that a £6 million 'one-stop shop' for sexual health is to be built in the city within two years.





The full article contains 517 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

alex paterson,

edinburgh 26/08/2008 13:47:31
Cutting waiting times at A&E are always promised but nothing ever happens,why fool the people all the time.
2

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

26/08/2008 13:59:53
they want to cut waiting times at the police call centre - nothing has improved since it was introduced
3

gorgeousgorgieboy,

Edinburgh 26/08/2008 14:13:56
You sometimes meet nice people in A&E waiting areas. I once met Drek Riordan's granny. She had been nutted in a nightclub.
4

Linda,

Edinburgh 26/08/2008 15:23:41
Thanks to the SNP Scottish Government
5

Old Cartha Boy,

26/08/2008 16:06:37
4 hours is still an outrageous time to wait! And that is a wait to be seen, not treated! Shocking!
6

Calum10,

26/08/2008 16:26:23
I blame the SNP government for being overly competent, genuinely listening to the concerns of people and being absolutely sincere on manifesto commitments. It is an absolutely scandalous state of affairs. Bring back Labour and the LibDems, I say; we Scots expect no more than corruption, lies, failing public services and poverty of self-belief.
7

WGH Doctor,

edinburgh 26/08/2008 16:42:57
How many temporary (or locum) doctors were used by A+E during this period? The oldest trick in the book!
8

Kitti Kat,

Newtown Square 26/08/2008 17:14:15
four hours or less to wait for treatment in an ER? Perhaps the NHS should hire more qualified doctors so that the wait won't be so long. Disgraceful!!!!
9

P I Staker,

26/08/2008 17:21:31
wonder why this tucked in under the East Lothian listing?
10

patientpower,

26/08/2008 17:49:43
Did the reporter ask them how they achieved this, I will tell you, by transferring in-patients (many of them elderly) all over the place (between hospitals too)moving them in the middle of the night and discharging at midnight to empty beds to get casualties out of A&E on time in order that they met their target, no heed to the patient just to how good their figures would look, the welfare, peace of mind and needs of the patient was over-ridden by the managers (not doctors) moving them as they were about to breech their target, funny how McCaffery doesn't mention that. This is a failing board which is not patient driven but finance (which by the way they have overspent already, failed to mention that in their praise also)and target driven.
11

J4cko,

Edinburgh 26/08/2008 18:16:04
Personally I don't mind waiting to be treated for a minor injury if it means staff are free to treat the more serously injured.

Sure, its annoying having to wait for a number of hours but you can't help everyone.
12

baps,

East Lothian 26/08/2008 18:19:07
Never any praise when the RIE is reported. Always quick to criticise....let's see what you have to say when you are treated in 4 hours (Old Cartha Boy, the 4 hour target is to have treatment and either admitted or discharged...I work there).
13

Julian.,

edinburgh 26/08/2008 23:11:36
#12 agreed,

Some people are just never happy. Maybe we should send those like Old Cartha boy to be treated in Baghdad and then see if he complains when he gets back.

You wonder how low it would have to go before they thought it was a good service. 5 minutes? Of course it's those who complain the most who also complain when their taxes go up to pay for it. Sure Old Cartha, we'll treat you the instant you arrrive if you're prepared to stomach an extra £1000 a year in taxes. Interested???
14

Old Cartha Boy,

Ddumbreck 27/08/2008 09:09:46
re #12 and 13 - i think I've hit a raw nerve here! If we have to compare the service in the ERI to being better than its equivalent in Bagdhad, that is the clearest admission that our health service is poor.

I've lost 2 friends and family in the past 9 months who have undergone successful operations but died due to subsequent hospital acquired infections - one went in to have a broken toe reset and died 12 days later due to infection! I'll take my chances in the Bagdhad Royal Infirmary!
15

J4cko,

27/08/2008 15:49:21
I have to agree with those who said that there is nothing but critisism for the NHS.

If something bad happens, its all over the papers.

Never any mention of the good work done by our nurses, doctors and all associated healthcare workers, and the lives saved everyday. But then again its not an exciting story is it!

As for people who have sadly lost their lives due to hospital infections, it really is shocking that this happens, but I think some of the blame should be on visitors not washing hands, sitting on beds and generaly disregaring the rules through ignorance.

"Its ok I don't have anything, I don't need to wash my hands" but not aware that they could be spreading mrsa or C Diff throughout the hospital with everything (including relatives) they touch.
16

Ian down under,

Kawerau 27/08/2008 22:00:19
How many people who complain about waiting times have ever considered a simple answer. Train as a doctor or nurse [there are shortages of both] and go and work there. End of problem.
17

Julian.,

edinburgh 28/08/2008 00:03:59
Old Cartha Boy,

No raw nerves here. I have no association with the NHS. I just happen to believe that constant whinging when things improve is counterproductive.

Good luck in Baghdad. As they say though, talk is cheap. Easy to say you'd be happy to be treated there when you know it will never happen. I'm sorry to hear about your family and friends but I think you'll find those patients in Baghdad have ten times the risk of picking up post-operative infections.
18

Sloane Ranger,

13/09/2008 18:46:38
It is 4 hours to be seen, treated then either discharged or moved to a ward. Not just to get seen.

The A&E staff work extremely hard to syick to this target, despite being in a hospital that is too small, working with equiment that is outdated, working understaffed, and all the time being verbally and physically assaulted by patients, all be it a small minority.

And just to bring it to everyones attention, I'm not speaking for any other professionals who work in the ERI, but Radiographers at the ERI are the WORST PAID IN THE COUNTRY for the work that they do! Agenda for Change has put us 25% worse off for working at an already pitiful rate at the weekend. I would earn more in Tesco for a Saturday night than I do at the ERI A&E!!! And we've writtn to Nicola Sturgeon about it too, surprise surprise, no response!

 

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