Nearly 3,000 patients a day in England cared for in corridors or makeshift areas
نظرة سريعة
- Figures reveal nearly 3,000 patients daily in England experienced corridor care or waited over 45 minutes for a ward bed last month.
- This data, published for the first time, highlights the scale of the challenge facing the NHS, with ministers pledging to end the practice by 2029.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
Nearly 3,000 patients a day in England were cared for in hospital corridors or makeshift treatment areas instead of beds last month. This data, published for the first time, highlights the scale of the challenge facing the NHS. Ministers have pledged to eradicate corridor care, defined as patients waiting more than 45 minutes for an appropriate place or bed, by 2029.
Nearly 3,000 patients a day had to be cared for in hospital corridors or make-shift treatment areas rather in a bed on a ward in England last month, figures show.
It is the first time the data has been published and reveals the scale of the challenge facing the NHS in tackling what ministers say is "unsafe" and "unacceptable".
Corridor care is when patients spend more than 45 minutes waiting for an appropriate place for their care and ministers have pledged to eradicate the practice by 2029.
In A&E, this can be in corridors and side-rooms and make-shift treatment areas where there is not the proper equipment to keep them safe and maintain dignity.
On the wards, it is when patients have been waiting for a bed for 45 minutes or more.
The figures show during May there were 2,241 patients a day, on average, who experience corridor care, while on wards there were 669.
NHS analysis found that 20 trusts accounted for more than half of the cases of corridor care in A&E, while 20 trusts also accounted for more than two thirds elsewhere in hospitals.
"That is why, for the first time, we are publishing this data to shine a spotlight on where the problems are greatest and ensure trusts get the support they need, with the vast majority of corridor care concentrated in a small number of organisations."
Suzanne has taken her mother, in her 80s, to A&E in the East Midlands five times this year. Every visit meant more than 24 hours waiting in a corridor.
Confused and distressed, her mother was only helped to the toilet or given a drink because family were there, she says.
"If we hadn't been, I dread to think what might have happened."
Kathy's experience was no better. Sent in by her GP one morning earlier this year with a suspected eye infection, she waited 36 hours in a chair, alone, in a hospital in the East of England before being told her blurred vision was caused by a brain tumour.
"It was horrendous… I got home and threw up. I was exhausted and broken."
One recalled a shift where the corridor was lined with patients. A body had to be wheeled past them on its way to the mortuary. Later, another patient went into cardiac arrest in the same corridor.
Another nurse said her emergency department felt "like a war zone". She described a patient who died unnoticed in the corridor.
ما الذي يجب مراقبته
توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق
Corridor care will be eradicated by 2029.
محتمل · خلال سنوات
أسئلة مفتوحة
- What specific support will be provided to the trusts with the highest rates of corridor care?
- What are the long-term consequences for patients experiencing corridor care?
- What measures are being implemented to ensure patient dignity and safety in these situations?
- How will the progress towards eradicating corridor care by 2029 be monitored and reported?






