Wes Streeting says he feels disgrace at folks being handled in NHS hospital corridors | EUROtoday

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Patients being handled in hospital corridors is the disgrace of the NHS, Wes Streeting has stated, as a brand new ballot signifies satisfaction with the well being service has hit a document low.

The well being secretary, who has spent this week visiting accident and emergency departments throughout the nation throughout a surge of flu instances, stated he was left feeling a “combination of pride and shame”. He stated he met one affected person – an aged lady – who had spent 30 hours in a hall on a trolley.

The new survey discovered that simply 31 per cent of adults are glad with the service offered by GPs and hospitals – a historic low for NHS satisfaction rankings.

Wes Streeting has spent this week visiting accident and emergency departments across the country during a surge of flu cases

Wes Streeting has spent this week visiting accident and emergency departments throughout the nation throughout a surge of flu instances (PA Wire)

The earlier low for public satisfaction was 34 per cent in 1997, simply earlier than Tony Blair took workplace.

The ballot, performed by Ipsos for The Sunday Timesconfirmed that satisfaction with the well being service is greater amongst older teams, with 42 per cent of these aged 75 and over feeling glad.

Just 27 per cent of these aged 35 to 44 had been glad with the NHS, whereas the determine was simply 26 per cent for these affected by a long-term well being situation.

Mr Streeting stated: “Under the Conservatives, the ‘NHS winter crisis’ came as consistently as the John Lewis ads and the Coca-Cola truck. No wonder [The] Sunday Times poll shows public satisfaction in the NHS at rock bottom.”

Reflecting on his go to to A&E departments, he added: “As I reflect on these visits I feel a combination of pride and shame. Pride in the people who work in our National Health Service, who bust a gut to give people the best possible care.

“Shame at the sight of people on trolleys in corridors, many of their waits avoidable if the right care had been available closer to home, often in their homes.”

The health secretary said he was left feeling a ‘combination of pride and shame’

The well being secretary stated he was left feeling a ‘combination of pride and shame’ (PA Wire)

He additionally stated Labour had “hit the ground running” because it received a historic election victory in July.

“Our immediate action to resolve the doctors’ strikes means this is the first winter in three years with staff on the front line, rather than the picket line.

“We’ve gone hell for leather on vaccination, with the flu and Covid vaccines now joined by the RSV [respiratory syncytial virus] vaccine for the first time. NHS community trusts and ambulance services are innovating to divert people from unnecessary A&E attendances and ambulance call-outs.”

But he added: “There’s so much more to do: to stabilise our community pharmacies, to improve mental health and to tackle the crisis in social care. It will take time. We’ve only been in power for less than six months. A lot done, a hell of a lot more to do.”

It comes amid warnings from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine that the scenario might worsen as we head into winter, with the organisation’s president Dr Adrian Boyle accusing the federal government of failing to make emergency care a “political priority”.

“Since last year, our worry is that we’ve gone backwards,” he stated. “Last year, we estimated, based on scientific evidence, that nearly 14,000 additional deaths occurred because of long stays in emergency departments… I am worried that it could be worse than that.”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/nhs-hospitals-wes-streeting-labour-health-b2668587.html