Sat. Oct 5th, 2024
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England’s National Health Service (NHS) aims to begin discharging thousands of patients into care homes and other settings in the next few weeks in an effort to free up desperately needed beds.

The state-run health service, which delivers free care to the whole population and until recently had been a source of pride for many Britons, is under strain following years of relative underinvestment, the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, and strike action by frontline staff over pay.

Some patients are being treated in corridors, and ambulances have been queuing outside hospitals to hand over patients to emergency wards, as doctors and nurses struggle to discharge patients amid a shortage of staff and beds.

The government said in a statement it would make up to 200 million pounds (about $350 million) of additional funding available in England to buy short-term care places — to allow patients who doctors judge have low medical needs to be looked after outside hospital — and 50 million pounds to improve existing facilities.

The statement did not say if the NHS in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland would also be putting more funds into care beds.

A massive clock on the side of a gold-trimmed tower is visible against a blue sky, with strike placards in the foreground.
Frontline workers are striking over pay disputes as pressure ramps up on England’s NHS.(AP Photo: Kin Cheung)

The NHS in England also discharged some patients into other settings during the pandemic, when hospitals sought to clear as many beds as possible for use by patients with COVID-19.

“The NHS is under enormous pressure from COVID and flu, and on top of tackling the backlog caused by the pandemic, Strep A and upcoming strikes, this winter poses an extreme challenge,” UK Health Minister Steve Barclay said in a statement.

Mr Barclay will address parliament on Monday to outline other measures to reduce the pressures facing the NHS.

A group of men and women, mostly wearing black puffer jackets, hold a banner saying "Support the Ambulance Workers"
Paramedics on strike outside the NHS’s London Ambulance Service headquarters.(Reuters: Henry Nicholls)

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said last week that reducing hospital waiting lists was one of his five priorities this year.

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