NHS plans may require patients with non-urgent ailments in A&E to return later to manage overcrowding. Eighteen hospitals in England are already using digital triage to prioritize urgent cases.
Key points
NHS plans to manage A&E overcrowding
Patients may be told to return later for non-urgent care
Eighteen hospitals using digital triage assessment
Urgent cases will still receive immediate treatment
NHS aims for more bookable appointments
Mentioned in this story
NHSNHS England
Patients who turn up at A&E with non-urgent ailments could be told to come back another time under NHS plans to stop hospitals becoming overcrowded and avoid the service’s usual winter crisis.
Eighteen hospitals in England are already using “digital triage assessment” to help A&E staff decide which patients need to be seen right away or be dealt with in another way.
If patients do need urgent care they are treated at once in the usual way. But if they have more minor ailments and can wait, they are told to come back later that day or the next day or referred to a community-based service, such as a GP or pharmacy.
Jim Mackey, NHS England’s chief executive, on Wednesday urged all hospitals to implement what it calls a “hi-tech concierge service”, to prevent A&Es becoming overwhelmed.
Patients will see “really big change ahead from us in the next few months” in how urgent and emergency services operate, Mackey said. Using many more bookable appointments, so that patients no longer face long delays to access care, is “a personal obsession of mine”, he told an audience of health service leaders at the NHS ConfedExpo conference in Manchester.
Jim Mackey.
Jim Mackey, chief executive of NHS England. Photograph: PA Images/Alamy
A switch to more bookable slots will help “bring more order” to services that are frequently overwhelmed with demand, especially during the winter, he believes.
With “digital triage”, patients put details of their illness into online hospital information gathering systems when they arrive at an emergency department. That helps A&E staff to assess their condition and decide the best way to manage them.
East Lancashire teaching hospitals NHS trust has found that the triage tool has helped almost halve average waiting times faced by A&E patients from 178 minutes – just under three hours – to 94 minutes, NHS England said.
Q&A
What are the new NHS plans for A&E patients with non-urgent ailments?
The NHS plans to ask patients with non-urgent ailments to return later or refer them to community services to manage overcrowding in A&E.
How does digital triage assessment work in A&E?
Digital triage assessment helps A&E staff determine which patients need immediate care and which can wait or be referred elsewhere.
Which hospitals in England are using the new triage system?
Eighteen hospitals in England are currently implementing the digital triage assessment system as part of the NHS plans.
What changes can patients expect in A&E services in the coming months?
Patients can expect significant changes in A&E services, including more bookable appointments to reduce wait times and improve access to care.
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“The new approach is designed to end the uncertainty of not knowing how long you’ll be expected to wait while ensuring ED doctors can focus on those who need urgent treatment most”, it said.
Mackey urged all NHS trusts to follow the lead of the 18 hospitals handling A&E demand this way. Patients who do not receive A&E care when they attend can also be given an appointment with a physiotherapist or mental health services or at a same-day emergency care unit.
“The big prize for this coming winter is shifting to introducing many more appointments into urgent care,” he added. A combination of booked appointments and digital triage in A&E could have an “enormous” beneficial impact on both patients and staff when the cold spell arrives.
NHS England could not say how many patients at the 18 hospitals using this approach are told to come back at another time. But it said the change had gone down well with patients.
“Generally having a better sense of when you’ll be seen, and getting booked into the right service more quickly, is positive and for example at East Lancashire, trialling the tech has brought waiting times in ED down by nearly half,” a source said.
But Rachel Power, chief executive of the Patients Association, cautioned that “digital triage assessment” may not suit all patients.
“As digital triage rolls out more widely, it must work for all patients, not just the digitally confident. Older patients, those with disabilities, and people with limited digital access must never be disadvantaged because they couldn’t use a kiosk or a tablet,” she said.
“And any patient who is redirected or given a later appointment slot needs explicit, easy-to-understand information about what to do if their condition deteriorates, who to call, where to go, and how quickly to act.”
“Without that safety-netting, vulnerable patients risk falling through the cracks. The ambition is right but patients and their experience must be at the centre of how these reforms are designed and delivered, not just the beneficiaries of them.”