Category ArchiveResponse times
Response times & ambulances firegeezer on 26 Nov 2007
Response Times - cont’d.
AS BRITAIN’S NHS (National Health Service) CONTINUES TO COLLAPSE ON ITSELF, this story comes from Wales today.
The South Wales Echo reports this morning that:
A YOUNG footballer who broke one of his legs was left lying on the pitch in agony for two rain-soaked hours before an ambulance arrived.
New Barry Town signing Leon Dennis, 23, collapsed with a horror injury after a tackle in the match against Llanwern and lay shivering on the ground in pain before being taken to hospital.
The match at Barry’s Jenner Park was abandoned as the shocked players and referee looked on in horror.
The full story is HERE.
It was just this past August (HERE) that the Welsh Ambulance Service held a big party and congratulated itself for “…drastically reducing response times and eliminating backlogs at hospital ER’s.”
Welsh Ambulance Service WEBSITE.
Response times & ambulances firegeezer on 01 Nov 2007
Hospital Backlog Strikes Again
THE PROBLEM OF “HOSPITAL BACKLOG” IS GETTING WORSE in Australia. Firegeezer has been documenting some of these instances during the past month where ambulances are being kept waiting at ER loading docks because the hospitals are unable to admit the patients. In some cases the waits have been two hours or more.
The “backlog effect” has been growing in UK and Canada as well, but the worse problems have been in Australia. Today the Daily Telegraph is reporting that in just one area of New South Wales, a region known as Central Coast, paramedics spent more than 1,000 hours every month waiting at hospitals to have their patients taken in. The seven Central Coast ambulance stations have this year lost the equivalent of 170 days queuing outside Gosford and Wyong Hospitals’ emergency departments.
One source said up to 80 per cent of the area’s 18 ambulance day crews were regularly off the road and unable to answer (emergency) calls because they were trapped at hospital emergency departments.
Read the Daily Telegraph STORY.


