The North West will receive £29.5 million to expand and upgrade A&Es at four Trusts, ensuring they have the physical space to treat patients, manage patient flow and improve infection control, the Health Secretary Matt Hancock has announced today.
This is in addition to the £300 million announced recently for 117 Trusts to upgrade their facilities, meaning the Government has now invested £450 million to upgrade A&Es this winter.
The funding will expand waiting areas and increase the number of treatment cubicles, helping boost A&E capacity by providing additional space and reducing overcrowding. Projects will be completed by the start of next year so hospitals benefit from the upgrades during the peak of winter.
Alongside this, a new offer to patients is being piloted in Trusts across England, with NHS 111 being the first point of contact for accessing urgent medical care.
To ensure patients get the right care in the right place and avoid unnecessary visits to Emergency Departments, NHS 111 will build on its role during the pandemic to direct patients to the most clinically appropriate service, including Emergency Departments, an Urgent Treatment Centre, a GP or mental health professional.
Based on what works best during the pilots, this approach will be rolled out to all Trusts from December this year.
Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock said:
“We are investing £450 million to make sure our A&E departments are ready for winter. Hospitals around the country will be able to expand and upgrade to ensure they can continue safely treating patients in the coming months.
“During the peak of the pandemic we saw millions of people using NHS 111 to get the best possible advice on Covid-19, and other urgent NHS services. These pilots will build on this and test whether we can deliver quicker access to the right care, provide a better service for the public and ensure our dedicated NHS staff aren’t overwhelmed.
“We all need to play our part by washing our hands regularly, using a face covering and keeping our distance from those not in our household. We are determined to protect the NHS as we did during the peak.”
NHS 111 will also book appointments for patients with the appropriate service to cut out unnecessary queueing and ensure they get the right care first time. This will be safer and more convenient for patients as it will reduce the amount of time spent in waiting rooms.
Those facing a life-threatening emergency should continue to dial 999 immediately. If someone is unsure how serious a condition is then NHS 111 can offer advice and if necessary, dispatch an ambulance.
To support this expansion the NHS is investing £24 million to increase 111 call handling capacity and will have more clinicians on hand to provide expert advice and guidance.
Each year there are 14.4 million A&E attendances in England that arrive without referral by 111, a GP or in an ambulance, as well as 2.1 million attendances that don’t result in any admission or treatment. Reducing this unnecessary use of Emergency Departments will ease the pressure on the NHS this winter and reduce transmission of Covid-19.
Dr Cliff Mann, NHS national clinical director for urgent and emergency care, said
“While emergency admissions are now back to near normal levels and 999 calls are actually above usual, covid infection control means rethinking how safely to look after people who might previously have been to an emergency department for a more minor condition. Local teams are working hard to expand and adapt services to ensure people can continue to get the care they need safely, whether that’s in hospital or closer to home.
“This additional investment will help us continue the development of NHS 111 and provide a broader range of services, with direct booking that will ensure all patients can see the right clinicians in the right setting, and address the extra challenges posed by Covid-19 so that emergency departments can safely treat those patients who do require their services.”
Dr Katherine Henderson, President of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said:
“Expansion of NHS 111 will help patients to be seen more quickly by the service most appropriate to their needs. We are pleased to have reached the consultation phase of how A&E performance is measured with a focus on the safe, timely care of the very sickest patients, and look forward to the publication of the proposals.
“A further boost to capital funding to help redevelop our most challenged Emergency Departments is very welcome and vital to help ensure social distancing and reduce the spread of infection. Crowding must be eliminated from Emergency Departments – now more than ever – and this is a helpful step towards tackling that problem.”
The pandemic has shown NHS 111 can play a more prominent role in triaging patients to make sure they get the right care, first time round.
As winter approaches and we continue to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic, these additional measures will help to reduce overcrowding in A&E, protecting both staff and patients and making the NHS as safe as possible.
If a patient without a life-threatening condition in the pilot areas arrives at an A&E department without contacting NHS 111, they will continue to be given the assistance they need, but may end up waiting longer than patients with similar health issues who booked an appointment through NHS 111.
A public communications campaign ‘Help Us Help You’ will also launch later this year to direct people to the right NHS service.
Alongside this, NHS England has been exploring whether improvements could be made to emergency care performance measures as part of its ongoing clinically-led review, which has also considered how to accurately measure performance while the service meets the continuing challenges of Covid-19.
Before December a consultation will be launched on standards to ensure they reflect modern emergency care and deliver what patients need. The existing standards remain in place and – if any updates are subsequently made – this will only be on the basis of strong evidence and after thorough consultation.
- In July 2020, 1.48 million calls were made to NHS 111 with the vast majority (91%) of calls answered within 60 seconds.
- The £450 million forms part of an extra £1.5 billion capital funding announced by the PM this summer.
- The 111 pilots are currently live in Cornwall, Portsmouth and SE Hampshire and Blackpool, and have just begun in Warrington
- The 25 Trusts receiving a share of £150 million for A&E upgrades are below:
Region |
Trust |
Site |
2020/21 £'000 |
Summary of scheme |
East of England |
Mid and South Essex NHS Foundation Trust |
Southend Hospital |
9,700 |
Bring urgent and emergency care specialties together to allow effective flow of patient referrals between teams with increased capacity to avoid overcrowding and ensure patients are treated in the right environment. |
East of England |
Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
Luton and Dunstable |
5,700 |
Expansion of department to incorporate current Same Day Emergency Care and children’s assessment unit areas, with temporary relocation of minor injuries. |
East of England |
East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust |
Lister Hospital |
6,005 |
Front Door Triage and Streaming. |
London |
Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust |
King George Hospital |
3000 |
Emergency Department improvements to waiting area, streaming, Major trauma and resuscitation area. |
London |
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust |
Denmark Hill |
9603 |
Emergency Department remodel and major trauma capacity, Same Day Emergency Care and children’s emergency department. |
Midlands |
The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust |
Royal Shrewsbury Hospital |
6300 |
Avoidable admissions & emergency department expansion. Removing an existing modular building and replacing to support Same Day Emergency Care. |
Midlands |
University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust |
University Hospital Coventry |
3000 |
Emergency Department expansion. |
Midlands |
Worcester Acute Hospitals NHS Trust |
Worcestershire Royal Hospital |
2500 |
Re-locating Medical Assessment Unit, ambulatory emergency care and Stroke ward, releasing capacity for the emergency department expansion and increased same day emergency care. |
Midlands |
United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust |
Lincoln County Hospital |
7000 |
Emergency department new build and urgent care enhancements (avoidable admissions). Increase the footprint of the front door. |
North East and Yorkshire |
Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust |
Diana Princess of Wales Hospital |
4000 |
Create an urgent care hub that brings together an expanded emergency department and a priority admission area. |
North East and Yorkshire |
York Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust |
York Hospital |
2000 |
Provision of appropriate isolation capacity, Resuscitation Area, children’s waiting area, |
North East and Yorkshire |
Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust |
Scunthorpe General Hospital |
4000 |
Upgrade the mental health assessment room, ensure sufficient waiting area space, suitable single rooms and social distancing measures, and an appropriate area for assessment and admission in the emergency department. |
North West |
Countess of Chester NHS Hospital Foundation Trust |
Countess of Chester Main site |
7000 |
Redevelopment of Urgent and Emergency Care Services. |
North West |
Mid Cheshire Hospital NHS Foundation Trust |
Leighton Hospital |
9000 |
Reconfiguration and expansion of Emergency Care services. |
North West |
East Lancashire Hospital NHS Trust |
Royal Blackburn Hospital |
6000 |
Expansion of emergency department. |
North West |
Liverpool University Hospitals |
Aintree Hospital |
7500 |
Emergency Village & Regional Emergency Hub Expansion and redesign of assessment (Medical, Frailty, Surgical and Specialist Services), same day emergency care and waiting capacity. |
South East |
East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust |
William Harvey Hospital |
3000 |
Emergency department expansion and increasing same day emergency care. |
South East |
East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust |
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital |
4000 |
Emergency department Expansion and improved Flow. |
South East |
Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust |
Stoke Mandeville |
15000 |
Modular build of integrated children’s emergency department. |
South East |
Ashford and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
St Peter's Hospital Chertsey |
6000 |
Expanded emergency department and urgent treatment centre. |
South West |
Royal Devon & Exeter NHS Foundation Trust |
Royal Devon & Exeter Hospital (Wonford) |
6000 |
Provision of new emergency department majors, including 6 additional major trauma cubicles for infectious patients and reprovision of Minor injuries/Musculoskeletal due to major trauma expansion. |
South West |
Dorset Country Hospital NHS Foundation Trust |
Dorchester Hospital |
2000 |
Triage and minor injuries, a Priority Assessment Unit. |
South West |
Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust |
Torbay Hospital & Newton Abbot Community Hospital |
9000 |
Establishment of a Medical Assessment Unit for Adults and Children, emergency department expansion and enhanced |
South West |
University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust |
Bristol Royal Infirmary |
7700 |
A purpose built emergency department and up to three admission wards (medicine and surgery). |
South West |
Great Western Hospital NHS Foundation Trust |
Great Western Hospital |
5000 |
New single initial assessment area. Increase waiting capacity, urgent treatment centre and same day emergency care consulting rooms of 50%. New area with elevated infection control measures to act as ‘Blue Zone’ where patients identified as potentially infective will be managed. Increases in same day emergency care. |