The Economist - UK (2021-11-20)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist November 20th 2021 27
Britain

Emergencycare

The dead of winter


H


ow muchis  the  local  Amazon  ware­
house paying? Raina Summerson used
to  ask  that  question  a  couple  of  times  a
year.  Now  her  firm  checks  most  weeks,
such  is  the  competition  for  workers.  In
parts  of  the  country  she  has  raised  pay  at
Agincare, the care provider she runs, to £11
($15) an hour from around £9.50 before co­
vid­19  struck.  Even  so  carers  are  scarce:
“We are turning away work every day in ev­
ery one of our locations.”
That  is  bad  for  business—and  for  the
health  service,  the  source  of  much  of  that
work.  With  hospitals  unable  to  free  beds
because  of  a  lack  of  carers,  patients  ready
for  discharge  are  piling  up,  crowding  out
new  admissions.  In  October,  across  Eng­
land,  nearly  120,000  people  spent  more
than  four  hours  waiting  to  be  admitted.
Even in the worst winters, waits have never
been so long (see chart on next page).
Outside  the  wards  are  ambulances  try­
ing  to  discharge  patients  and  unable  to
pick  up  fresh  ones.  The  average  wait  for  a
“category two” incident (concerning a seri­

ous condition such as a stroke, chest pain
or burn) is 54 minutes, up from an average
of 25 last year and missing a target of 18. Re­
search  shows  longer  waits  are  associated
with more deaths. The West Midlands am­
bulance service has warned delays are put­
ting patients at risk of “catastrophic” harm.
Pressure is ratcheting up almost every­
where,  says  Chris  Hopson  of  nhsProvid­
ers, which represents hospitals. After near­
ly two years in which people have tried to
stay  away  from  health­care  facilities,  pa­
tient demand is now higher than it was be­
fore the pandemic. More primary­care ap­
pointments  are  by  phone,  which  tends  to
mean  more  referrals.  Patients  presenting
for acute care, meanwhile, are sicker, sug­
gesting that the wait for treatment has tak­
en a toll on their health. 
Fewerthan9,000peopleareinhospital

with  covid,  down  from  more  than  34,000
in January. But that is still a lot, and infec­
tion controls further reduce the number of
beds available. “We’ve stopped using areas
that were unsuitable even before the pan­
demic,” says an emergency doctor. Accord­
ing to Mr Hopson, the combination of co­
vid, anti­infection measures and the diffi­
culty  of  discharging  patients  has  cut  the
number of beds available by a third.
What  particularly  worries  hospital
bosses is how early in the year this crunch
has  come.  The  normal  pattern  is  for  pro­
blems  to  mount  until  January,  and  some­
times  longer.  Having  declined  for  three
weeks,  covid  cases  are  now  ticking  back
up,  meaning  those  with  the  disease  will
continue to take up space. And anti­covid
measures  are  making  recruitment  more
difficult.  Ms  Summerson  lost  20  of  her
1,100  care­home  workers  because  of  a  na­
tional  vaccine  mandate  which  came  into
effect on November 11th. 
Winter is tough in health­care systems
everywhere. That the taxpayer­funded nhs
falls into a “crisis” every year—and is suf­
fering so early in this one—reflects how lit­
tle  slack  it  has.  It  runs  on  relatively  low
numbers of doctors and nurses. In Europe,
only  Sweden  has  fewer  beds  per  person
than  Britain  does.  Other  rich  countries
with  small  numbers  of  beds  also  tend  to
have more “step­down” care, so people do
not linger in hospital.
Policymakers have long sought to divert

Hospitals are in a dire state—and temperatures are only just starting to drop

→Alsointhissection
28 Cricket’sracismreckoning
30 British-Indianswingvoters
30 Thefizzylabourmarket
32 What’sina surname?
34 Freeportsarenofreelunch
35 Bagehot: Britain’s divided
establishment

Correction: Last week, in a chart accompanying a
piece on nuclear power, we said Britain produced
235 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide per kilowatt-hour
of electricity generated. That should have been 235
grams. We apologise for the rather large error.
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