A&E waiting times in Scotland continue to stagnate, latest figures show
A&E waiting times in Scotland have continued to stagnate as less than two thirds of people were seen within four hours, new figures show.
Statistics released by Public Health Scotland on Tuesday show 63.5% of attendances at emergency departments in the week up to November 19 were seen and subsequently admitted, transferred or discharged within the target time.
The Scottish Government aims for this figure to be at 95%.
he number dropped slightly from 63.9% the previous week.
The statistics also showed 3,234 people during that week waited longer than eight hours, amounting to 13.1% of all attendances.
A total of 1,370 people – 5.5% – waited more than 12 hours.
Health Secretary Michael Matheson said: “I am clear that A&E performance is not where it needs to be and we are working with boards to support the delivery of sustained improvements.
“Our £12 million expansion of Hospital at Home is helping relieve pressure on our A&E departments by ensuring people receive care at home or as close to home as possible.
“Hospital bed occupancy continues to be a major factor impacting on performance.
“To address this, the delayed discharge and hospital occupancy action plan is being implemented at pace, delivering actions we know work to ensure patients receive the right care in the right setting.
“As we enter the challenging winter period, I would like to thank staff for their continued exceptional efforts in the face of sustained pressure.”
Scottish Tory health spokesman Dr Sandesh Gulhane said the figures showed the importance of having a Health Secretary who was not “mired in personal scandal”, referring to the row over a near-£11,000 data roaming bill racked up on Mr Matheson’s parliamentary iPad during a holiday to Morocco.
“Scotland’s A&E wards are already in crisis before we’re even in the full grips of winter, yet discredited Michael Matheson is still distracted by his unravelling tissue of lies around his iPad,” Dr Gulhane said.
“We know that these unacceptable figures – which take in the first full week of the roaming charges scandal – will have led to tragic and needless loss of life, and are a legacy of years of dire workforce planning by a succession of SNP health secretaries.
“The figures for the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital – the flagship hospital in Scotland’s largest health board – are particularly terrifying, with just 40% of patients being seen within four hours.
“Despite the best efforts of my hardworking colleagues on the frontline, our emergency wards simply can’t cope and the last thing we need is a preoccupied health secretary unable to tackle the crisis.”
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