NHS Winter Readiness

Jess Brown-Fuller Excerpts
Wednesday 30th October 2024

(1 day, 18 hours ago)

Westminster Hall
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Jess Brown-Fuller Portrait Jess Brown-Fuller (Chichester) (LD)
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Roger. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for North Shropshire (Helen Morgan) for bringing forward this important debate on a very busy day for all Members, given the Budget announcement in the Chamber.

Last winter was nothing short of a catastrophe for the NHS and everyone who depends on it. NHS figures show that, between November 2023 and March 2024, nearly three quarters of a million people endured A&E waits of more than four hours and nearly a quarter of a million waited for more than 12 hours. In west Sussex alone, there have been 25,000 cases of 12-hour A&E waits so far this year—a 36% increase on the same period last year. Those figures leave patients and staff in my constituency of Chichester deeply anxious as we approach another winter, especially given that we have had the busiest summer on record, with NHS staff managing a staggering 6.8 million attendances over just three months.

In many cases, being seen quickly is literally a matter of life or death, especially in acute and emergency settings. Rory Deighton, the director of the NHS Confederation’s Acute Network, warned us that:

“Without immediate funding there is a very real risk the NHS falls into crisis this winter, with ambulance response and handover delays, overcrowded A&Es and people stuck in hospital beds because of a lack of community and social care.”

It is evident that many of my constituents in Chichester have lost faith in emergency health services. A recent poll conducted by the Liberal Democrats showed that one in four Britons has avoided calling an ambulance for fear that it will take too long to arrive. NHS paramedics, nurses and doctors consistently go above and beyond, and yet the system they are working in has stretched them to breaking point. Patients are bearing the consequences: they suffer each winter as the NHS crisis intensifies.

The Chancellor’s Budget announcement today that a 10-year plan will be introduced in the spring will not address the immediate crisis on our doorsteps. It was disappointing to hear very little attention paid to social care, which we know causes a huge number of beds to be used in hospitals. We cannot fix the bed crisis by just buying more beds; we must invest in the workforce that supports those beds. We must ensure that, this winter, my constituents in Chichester do not sleep in corridors or wait in uncomfortable waiting rooms—an experience that is all too familiar for me because, last winter, my grandmother ended up in a corridor, after being admitted in agony, in full view of the public. That would be an incredibly distressing experience for anybody, let alone somebody suffering with acute dementia.

There is no point in throwing money at a leaky bucket if the funding will not get where it needs to go to address the issues across the healthcare system. In my role as Liberal Democrat spokesperson for hospitals and primary care, I have had the opportunity to meet professionals from across primary and secondary care and hear what they are calling for so they can successfully provide a service across the board this winter. They are asking to be able to plan, with budgets that have a shelf life longer than 12 months, and allow them to innovate for the future. Year after year, the previous Conservative Government resorted to spending hundreds of millions of pounds in emergency funds every year to manage the winter crisis.

That emergency funding was a short-term fix that often arrived in those hospitals far too late to address the problem, as my hon. Friend the Member for North Shropshire pointed out. It was short-term fix rather than a comprehensive long-term plan to invest ahead of the crisis. Liberal Democrats have long called for a winter taskforce to oversee a dedicated, ring-fenced fund to build resilience for hospital wards, A&E departments, ambulance services and patient discharge pathways over the next four years.

I have no doubt that this will not be the last time we talk about NHS preparedness for winter. I fear that the Budget today will not have alleviated the concerns and fears of my Chichester constituents, nor those of the staff working in health care in my area. I urge the Government to use our ideas and prepare the NHS for not just this winter but future ones. We are ready to work constructively with the Government to that end.