‘Like a horrific board game’: 33 hours inside an NHS in crisis
Crammed wards, burnt-out GPs, patients waiting hours for ambulances - the health service is at breaking point
Inside the dimly lit command centre at King's College hospital, staff arriving for the first beds meeting of the day are greeted with a warning: the hospital is already under strain. So, we are under pressure this morning," the head of nursing, Naomi Hosking, informs colleagues stood around her in a semi-circle. No one registers surprise. We've got a lot of patients in ED [emergency department] with little space to see new patients, so we need to get some early movement."
It's 8.32am and ED - maximum capacity 60 - is packed, with 61 patients inside. The oldest is 98; the youngest 30 days old. Later, that pressure will intensify: the number of ED patients - in beds, on trolleys or in chairs - will more than double to 137.
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