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Campaigning Against the Closures |
The BBC are reporting the longest A&E waits are in North West London. Brent Fightback and Save Our NHS, along with Ealing and Hammersmith hospital campaigners warned against the closure of Accident and emergency wards, including Central Middlesex. LINK
Our concerns have been vindicated.
Patients requiring emergency treatment in north-west London had the longest waits in the country.
London North West Hospital Trust failed to see 32.2% of its
patients within four hours during the week ending 19 October, and 26.7%
the following week.
Labour London Assembly member Dr Onkar Sahota said the two
"dangerous" results could be connected to the closure of two local
A&E departments.
The Trust said it understood "where change is required".
The figures obtained by the
Labour Party show the trust performing below the national average, which
stood at 11.2% and 9.4% respectively during the two weeks highlighted.
They revealed 827 and 628 patients had to wait more than four hours for emergency treatment.
In a statement the trust said: "We are working with our
healthcare partners... to address specific issues relating to capacity,
attendances and delays in discharging patients from hospital.
"Agreed actions are in place to improve performance which includes plans for 70 additional beds at Northwick Park Hospital."
Dr Sahota, a practising GP, said the closure of Central
Middlesex and Hammersmith A&E departments in September had put west
London hospitals under "unbearable pressure".
The GP said: "Despite consistent warnings, the mayor and
government have refused to recognise the dangerous impact these closures
have had.
"We can only hope that with the message now devastatingly
clear, they will take urgent action to help get A&E services in
North West London back on track."
In August the health watchdog the Care Quality Commission
said staff across the trust "were found to be caring and compassionate"
but that some patients at Northwick Park Hospital were being discharged
too early because of the patient flow through its A&E department.