NHS Winter Readiness Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateHelen Morgan
Main Page: Helen Morgan (Liberal Democrat - North Shropshire)Department Debates - View all Helen Morgan's debates with the Department of Health and Social Care
(1 month, 3 weeks ago)
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I beg to move,
That this House has considered NHS readiness for winter 2024-25.
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Sir Roger, and I am grateful to have secured a debate on the crucial topic of preparing the NHS for winter. This is particularly timely on a day when the Government have delivered the Budget and outlined their priorities for the coming year, and indeed, the years after that.
We all know that due to the Conservative failure to protect the NHS, winter is a time when pressure on the NHS peaks. Every year, we suffer what we describe as a winter crisis. But for the millions of people stuck on waiting lists, the thousands of people treated in corridors and the legions of staff battling to keep people safe, it must feel like the winter pressure never ends.
I am sure we would all agree that the health and care crisis requires long-term action—improving public health, focusing on primary care, training and retaining more doctors, dentists and nurses, fixing the crumbling NHS estate, and fundamentally, finally addressing the crisis in social care. But while we wait for that action, winter is now looming. The clocks have gone back and time to prepare for winter has run out. I am here to find out what the Government are doing both to get the NHS through the upcoming winter and, following the Budget statement, to get the NHS ready for the winters to come.
I am aware that the Chancellor has just announced a £22 billion cash injection into the NHS, although further detail on that was scant, so we will put forward our ideas in this debate and hope that they come to fruition over the next few weeks. For the sake of staff and patients, it is crucial that winter crises become a thing of the past. We have reached the point where winter pressure is normal all year around. We should be striving for the reverse, where pressure is relieved and the forecasted crisis does not happen. I am pleased to hear some of the measures that the Government have outlined today, but I remain worried that fundamental issues are still being ignored—most crucially, the crisis in social care. Until that is resolved, we will not be able to fix the NHS.
So what is the state of play? Dr John Dean, the clinical vice-president of the Royal College of Physicians, warned that the latest NHS statistics show the health service
“is in an extremely concerning position as we head into winter.”
He is not alone in holding such concerns, for it has already been a really busy year for the NHS. In fact, it has been the busiest ever summer for A&E departments in England, with NHS staff managing 6.8 million attendances in just the past three months, according to a briefing by NHS England on readiness for winter. Last month, emergency departments had 2.2 million attendances—the highest such number for a September on record—with more than 38,000 people waiting longer than 12 hours after the decision to admit them. Meanwhile, the weekly average of extra bed days for patients remaining in hospital beyond seven days due to delays in discharge was the highest since December 2022.
A look at my local hospital trust in Shropshire illustrates the situation well. In Shropshire, at the Shrewsbury and Telford hospital NHS trust, our bed occupancy rate is constantly around the 95% mark. That is not unusual; it has become the norm at acute hospital trusts up and down the country, and not just in winter, but all year around. Hospital staff constantly have to juggle resources to try to secure people the care they need. As the wards fill up, A&E becomes crowded and care moves on to corridors.
Every month, I am contacted by constituents who are shocked by what they have encountered in the hospital: being forced to wait for hours in pain on plastic chairs, or having their dignity taken away as they occupy a trolley in a corridor, in agony and in full view of the public. Many people remain unaware of how common that is until they find themselves with a loved one in that situation.
The “Dispatches” documentary filmed at Shrewsbury and Telford hospital trust earlier this year brought the reality home to the nation. The issues with hygiene and infection control were startling enough on their own—I am pleased that the trust is addressing those directly—but most stark was the human impact on the patients. Scenes included that of the elderly man who was forced to urinate while on a trolley in a corridor, in full view of staff, or the woman who cried out in agony for hours, with staff being left in despair at the terrible situation they were trying to deal with. That was not in the depths of winter; it was in April and May.
Corridor care takes a toll on patients and a huge toll on the staff who are forced to attempt to cope. However, the full scale and the impact of corridor care are unknown, because there is only patchy reporting on the level of care in temporary environments. As we seek to better understand and prepare for pressure in the winter, and all year round, will the Government consider mandating the recording and publishing of the number of patients receiving care in temporary environments, such as corridors? Honesty and transparency are key if we are to properly prepare for the winters to come.
Every month, more than 2,000 patients spend more than 12 hours in the A&E department at Shrewsbury and Telford, and one in every three of the many ambulances arriving outside have to wait more than an hour to hand over their patient—not in winter, but in every month of the year. Since April, ambulances have lost around 15,000 hours through waiting outside the two hospitals in Shropshire, and one poor patient was stuck in an ambulance in Shrewsbury for 15 and a half hours. As we have discussed many times, that keeps ambulances off the road, and has a knock-on effect on how long people who may be in life-or-death situations have to wait for help. This leads to situations such as the one in my constituency in April this year, where a carer was left alone performing CPR for 23 minutes while being told by the 999 call operator that no ambulance was available. Tragically, the victim died, and the carer who tried so hard to save her has been left traumatised—as, I would imagine, has the 999 call operator.
As I mentioned in the Chamber a couple of weeks ago, an 11-year-old in my constituency, Charlotte, has an adrenal deficiency that leads to her needing an urgent injection of hydrocortisone if she has some kind of trauma. When that happens, she is logged as needing an automatic category 1 ambulance response. Recently, a car crash happened involving Charlotte and her mother, and when an ambulance was called for, they were told that none was available, and the family had to make their own way to hospital. That is not good enough. It is endangering lives.
The target for a category 1 response time is an average of seven minutes. So far this year in Shropshire, the average has been 11 minutes and 57 seconds. For a category 3 response, which still means that the person urgently needs an ambulance, the average wait is more than two hours, which is more than double the target time. That is not new, but it is very wrong, and it demonstrates the pressure already facing the health service as we head into winter.
Perhaps more worryingly, the situation in many areas this summer has been getting worse, rather than better. West Midlands Ambulance Service, which serves my constituency, described a
“significant, rapid deterioration of delays at hospital in September which has continued further in October.”
The service has been operating with the highest level of risk score for the past year. October is forecast to be the second worst month on record for lost handover hours, with the equivalent of 130 out of 600 ambulance crews in the west midlands being lost to delays every single day—and it is only October. That takes a huge toll on the mental health of the hard-working staff involved at every level. It also undermines staff retention, which will be crucial for any NHS plan, such as the 10-year plan or any winter plan to come. We must retain these experienced professionals; we cannot rely on recruitment alone to solve the staffing crisis in our NHS.
These wonderful staff have been stretched to breaking point by years of neglect and mismanagement by the Conservatives. Labour must do better, yet patients and staff are understandably fearful as we approach winter. According to a recent poll commissioned by the Liberal Democrats, one in four people in Britain have avoided calling an ambulance because they were frightened that it would take too long to arrive.
Of course, many pensioners are particularly fearful this year. Winter is a perilous time for older people, given the additional diseases that they might catch, and many will be more at risk after being denied the winter fuel payment for the first time. This will be the first winter without the payment being universal, and the annual uprating of the state pension will not make up the shortfall until next spring, which will be too late for people to pay their electricity or gas bill—and if someone in my constituency has to top up their oil tank now, it is too late for that, too. There is a danger, as happened when fuel costs increased two years ago, that people will reduce or turn off their heating entirely, with possible consequences for their health and a knock-on effect on the NHS.
So what are the solutions? First, we need to stop throwing money at the fire and instead prepare properly. As we all know, the most cost-effective cure is prevention in the first place. Over the past seven years, the Conservative Government announced an average of £376 million of emergency funding each year to tackle the winter crisis, much of which arrived too late to make any meaningful difference.
The Liberal Democrats want to create a winter taskforce armed with a ringfenced fund of £1.5 billion for the next four years. That would be used to build resilience in hospitals, A&E departments, ambulance services and the discharge of patients, and allow integrated care boards and NHS trusts that are struggling to balance their books to plan their budget more effectively in advance to cope with the winter crisis. The taskforce would bring together senior leaders from the NHS and the Government, along with staff representatives, to ensure better co-ordination and preparation for winter. It would be empowered to deliver rapid changes in day-to-day operations to ensure a co-ordinated response—for example, by deploying more beds to certain hospitals or boosting social care capacity where it is most needed.
Tackling the issue of patient flow is the most fundamental aspect of steering our health system through this winter and the years ahead. If patients are to be treated on time, they need an ambulance to arrive on time, and that ambulance must be able to hand over its patient to A&E as soon as it gets there. If A&E is to have more capacity, we need to reduce the amount of people there in the first place through prevention and investment in primary care. We must make hospital beds available so that patients can be moved out of the A&E department and into the medical or surgical part of the hospital, as appropriate. If we are to move patients on when they are ready to go home, when they would be better served in their own home with the proper therapy, we must invest in social care and deal with its capacity issue, which is at the heart of so many of these problems.
Half a million people in England are waiting for care, stranded in hospital beds that are so important to free up over winter, and those in power have continually ignored social care for many years. I am extremely worried that the Government have not said an awful lot about social care in the Budget today. The additional money announced for local councils, £600 million of which is for social care, will presumably be gobbled up largely by the increase in national insurance contributions and the minimum wage. It is really concerning that those councils will not be able to meet their social care commitments in the future. We urgently need cross-party talks so that, between us, we can commit to a long-term solution to the crisis in social care.
Liberal Democrats believe that we should introduce free personal care along the lines of the model in Scotland. That would help people to stay in their own homes and out of hospital and ease the pressure on the NHS. We should pay for a fairer deal for unpaid carers and a higher carers’ minimum wage, which of course, we saw some movement towards in today’s Budget. We welcome that and look forward to the review of the cliff edge in the unpaid carers’ allowance. Critically, a higher carers’ minimum wage must be fully funded, because councils will be pushed over the edge if they are not given the money to support that, as will many small care providers, which provide the vast majority of paid social care in this country.
We need to ensure that people can see a GP when they need one, so that they do not end up adding to the overwhelming pressure on A&E departments. I recently spoke to someone in my constituency who waited seven weeks for a telephone consultation. We must ensure that we focus on the outcome for the patient, which is why we would give everyone the right to see a GP within seven days, or within 24 hours if the need was urgent, and we need to increase the GP workforce by at least 8,000 to deliver that. As I said, it is crucial that that is done through retention as well as recruitment and more training.
We also need to reform the NHS dental contract and guarantee access to an NHS dentist for anyone needing urgent or emergency dental care, ending the dental deserts that exist in my North Shropshire constituency and the rest of the country. The biggest reason for a child to go into hospital is to have a tooth extracted, because their teeth are in such a poor state. That is scandalous, and I look forward to hearing what the Government will do to address that issue.
We also need to support community pharmacists, who are critical to the preparedness of the NHS, by making sure that everyone has access to the healthcare advice and medicines that they need. Pharmacy First is an excellent idea and helps to relieve the pressure on the NHS, but community pharmacists are closing at an alarming rate, and we risk that good idea going to waste. Are enough people being vaccinated against the “tripledemic” of flu, covid and respiratory syncytial virus, including staff? Analysis by the Health Service Journal showed that 283,000 fewer staff received a flu jab last winter than at the end of 2019, despite the number of frontline staff growing. If staff are not protected, fewer patients will be protected when they get seriously ill, and staff will not be able to go to work to treat ill people. Increasing the awareness of what is on offer at pharmacies and reversing the cuts to the public health grant to increase the health and fitness of people up and down the country are both integral to relieving pressure on hospitals and preparing the NHS for winters to come.
Stories and statistics from up and down the country show that the NHS was already under extremely severe pressure this summer. That has been the case throughout this year and last year. It is autumn now, so it is critical that the Government outline their plans to deal with the added pressure of the winter to come. More fundamentally, we need bold, long-term action so that winter crises become a thing of the past. We need to train, recruit and retain staff, and make them proud and happy, instead of tired and stressed, with them then leaving the system. We need to fix our crumbling hospitals so that money can be spent on care instead of fighting fires and draining floods. We need to invest in all aspects of primary care, including dentists, doctors, pharmacists and optometrists, as I reminded Members in the Chamber last week. Most crucially, we must confront the crisis in social care.
Earlier this week, the Secretary of State said that the Budget will arrest the decline in the NHS, but I am afraid that that is not good enough. The annual winter crisis costs lives, jobs and patient dignity. It also costs the taxpayer more than we can afford. We must invest now; we cannot afford not to do it. We must invest to save so that we have an NHS fit for the future.
I thank you, Sir Roger, the Minister, the shadow Minister, all my Liberal Democrat colleagues and the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) for coming to this debate on a very busy day. I am grateful for all their contributions, which were positive and constructive, as always. I thank the Minister in particular for her comprehensive response. It is reassuring to hear that she has considerable expertise in this area.
We welcome the investment that was announced in the Budget, including significant investment in day-to-day NHS spending, capital investment and investment to deal with the repairs backlog, which needs urgent attention. We called for the Government to address the backlog in our general election campaign, because we recognise its importance. However, the very nature of the Budget statement means that we have been a bit light on detail today, and that is why we want to provide constructive opposition and ideas to move this forward.
I reiterate my concerns about social care. Little was said about it today, but many social care providers are small businesses that will be heavily impacted not only by the increase in the minimum wage, which is welcome for carers, but by the increase in employer national insurance contributions. We risk a real crisis in those companies and in local government budgets, which are perilously stretched, if we do not have a plan to fund those carers and their wages. I leave the Minister with that thought, and thank everybody for attending.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered NHS readiness for winter 2024-25.