Thousands at risk as A&E queues stop NHS paramedics attending 999 calls
Paramedics in England missing 117,000 urgent calls each month, as CQC warns of worrying new status quo'
Paramedics in England cannot respond to 117,000 urgent 999 calls every month because they are stuck outside hospitals looking after patients, figures show.
The amount of time ambulance crews had to wait outside A&E units meant they were unavailable to attend almost one in six incidents.
673 patients had to wait 10 hours or more to be handed over to A&E staff - NHS guidelines say no one should wait more than 15 minutes.
45,000 patients were delayed for at least an hour and 21,000 for at least two hours - just under the highest numbers ever seen.
While crews spent 558,000 hours attending incidents, they were unable to complete another 117,000 job cycles", which equates to 21% of total ambulance capacity - huge rises on the 45,000 job cycles or 7% of capacity in October 2019.
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