The A&E department at The Royal Oldham Hospital is currently experiencing unprecedented high levels of demand and so to ensure patient safety staff are urging the public not to visit A&E unless they are critically ill, have been involved in an accident, or it’s an emergency and urgent care is needed.
Despite the public messages issued in advance of the Easter weekend advising the public to choose well and to only attend A&E if they really have to, staff at The Royal Oldham Hospital have seen record numbers.
On Good Friday the A&E at Oldham saw 289 patients. Today, as of 6pm the department saw 216 patients.
Staff are working as best they can to meet high numbers of people turning up to A&E, many of whom are presenting with minor ailments including coughs and colds and therefore are having to wait up to 7 hours to be treated after triage.
The pressures facing A&E are compounded by the acuity of patients and the large numbers of patients who cannot be discharged from hospital even though they are medically fit due to delays in their discharge and transfer of care back home or in social care in the community.
Damien Finn, Interim Chief Executive at The Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, which runs three A&E departments including Royal Oldham, said: