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A&E seeing more people with sore throats, backache, insomnia and coughs

NHS Providers said the strain on primary care services, including GPs and dentists, means patients often resort to A&E.

Jane Kirby
Monday 09 October 2023 19:01 EDT
A&E departments are seeing a rise in people attending with sore throats, insomnia, coughs and earache (PA)
A&E departments are seeing a rise in people attending with sore throats, insomnia, coughs and earache (PA) (PA Wire)

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A&E departments are seeing a rise in people attending with sore throats, insomnia, coughs and earache.

Data for England analysed by the PA news agency also shows more people going to A&E with complaints such as hiccups, nasal congestion, backache and nausea.

Cases where sore throat was the chief complaint rose 77% between 2021/22 and 2022/23, from 191,900 cases to 340,441.

Patients going to A&E with coughs rose 47% from 219,388 to 322,500, while attendances forĀ nosebleeds rose by a fifth from 47,285 cases to 56,546.

Persistent strain on primary care services, including GPs and dentists, means patients often resort to A&E when they cannot access timely care elsewhere

Miriam Deakin, NHS Providers

The data further revealed thatĀ complaints for backache have risen 2% from 317,149 to 324,443, while earaches rose 22% from 191,387 to 233,723.

People also went to A&E requesting medication, with cases rising by a fifth from 31,960 to 38,435.

Miriam Deakin, director of policy and strategy at NHS Providers, said: ā€œThe rise in A&E admissions is piling even more pressure on to an already-stretched NHS.

ā€œPersistent strain on primary care services, including GPs and dentists, means patients often resort to A&E when they cannot access timely care elsewhere.

ā€œMinor ailments such as coughs, earache, fever, nausea and hiccups can and should be managed through more appropriate services, such as pharmacies and NHS 111 online.

ā€œThis could ease pressure on emergency departments, whose priority is to deliver urgent care for those most in need.

ā€œBoosting capacity of staff, beds and equipment in these settings would also significantly help. However, this requires proper funding and support from the Government.ā€

Some 44% more complaints in A&E were for fever compared to the previous year, rising from 566,531 to 813,609.

Hiccups cases rose 3% from 794 to 819 and insomnia cases rose 6% from 1,265 toĀ 1,343.

Meanwhile, diarrhoea cases jumped 12% from 106,072 to 119,019.

Many of my patients have tried not to come to A&E and have tried other all other routes before attending

Dr Adrian Boyle, Royal College of Emergency Medicine

Furthermore, nasal congestion cases rose 30% fromĀ  12,380 to 16,115 and nausea cases rose 14% fromĀ 14,177 toĀ 16,161.

Overall, some 8.6 million attendances resulted in the patient being discharged with written advice.

Dr Adrian Boyle, president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said:Ā ā€œWhile there has certainly been an increase in issues which may not have traditionally been thought of as requiring emergency care, it is not the main problem, and is symptomatic of a much wider issue.

ā€œOur communities need good access to healthcare. This requires an adequately resourced and staffed system with sufficient capacity at every level.

ā€œCommunity-based services are massively stretched, A&Es remain dangerously overcrowded, and in-patient care does not currently have anywhere near the bed capacity needed.

ā€œMany of my patients have tried not to come to A&E and have tried other all other routes before attending.

Unfortunately, the entire NHS is heaving under unsustainable pressures and patients are increasingly looking for any port in the storm

Prof Kamila Hawthorne, RCGP

ā€œPeople do not, and should not be expected, to know the severity of their condition without clinical expertise or examination. And those who feel they require urgent and emergency care should attend A&E.

ā€œOne change which certainly would have an impact is greater clinical input into the NHS 111 service to help direct patients to the right care for them ā€“ be that in the community or, when necessary, at hospital.

ā€œConcern over pressures on A&Es should not fall on the public. An adequately staffed and funded health service with enough capacity can meet patient demand.ā€

Professor Kamila Hawthorne, chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs, said: ā€œWhen people are ill, they want timely care and attention and we cannot expect them to make clinical judgements about how ill they are, nor should we blame them if they access care in a place that might not be best to meet their needs.

ā€œUnfortunately, the entire NHS is heaving under unsustainable pressures and patients are increasingly looking for any port in the storm.

ā€œWhile some of the presentations to A&E may not be indicative of a medical ā€˜emergencyā€™, conditions such as fevers ā€“ which saw a 44% increase in admissions over the last year ā€“ can be symptomatic of something more serious that needs the skill and expertise of a medical professional to diagnose and treat.

ā€œAs the front door of the NHS, GPs play a vital role in alleviating pressures from other services, but we are in the grip of a workload and workforce crisis and in desperate need of financial and staffing support if we are to continue keeping the NHS upright.

ā€œWe share our patientsā€™ frustrations when they face long waits for a GP appointment but last month alone, general practice delivered five million extra appointments for patients than in August 2019 ā€“ equating to 150,000 extra appointments per day ā€“ all with 883 fewer GPs than in 2019.

ā€œGP teams are working their hardest to deliver safe, timely and appropriate care ā€“ there simply are not enough of us to meet demand that is growing in both volume and complexity.ā€

Dr Tim Cooksley, president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said long waiting lists mean patients will often be unable to tolerate symptoms ā€œnecessitating them to access urgent and emergency careā€.

He said long lists also reduce peopleā€™s faith in being able to access services in a timely manner and so some will use acute care services.

ā€œThis adds to the overwhelming pressure on an extremely overstretched urgent care system and undoubtedly will increase appalling and intolerable experiences for emergency patients this winter,ā€ he said.

ā€œMitigation is possible and it is essential that action is taken that helps restore the confidence of patients and staff over the next few months.ā€

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said it was supporting primary care to prevent unnecessary trips to emergency departments and has already made improvements in A&E waiting times.

ā€œThere are more than 2,000 additional doctors and 31,000 additional staff working in general practice compared to June 2019 and our Long Term Workforce Plan will create a more sustainable NHS.

ā€œOur Pharmacy First service, backed by up to Ā£645 million, will enable community pharmacies to supply prescription-only medicines for seven common conditions without patients needing to see a GP and the Urgent and Emergency Care Recovery Plan is creating 5,000 permanent staffed hospital beds.

ā€œWe are also on track to deliver 10,000 virtual ward beds ahead of winter, allowing patients to recover in the comfort of their own homes where appropriate.ā€

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