Derby and Derbyshire Health & Social Care Critical Incident Continues Into Weekend
Services remain under significant pressure
Services remain under significant pressure
The Derbyshire health and care system saw new levels of demand for services during the Christmas bank holiday period and this has continued with pressure on services rising as we moved towards the New Year bank holiday weekend. As a result of this, a critical incident was declared to help prioritise and maintain safe services for patients and this decision was taken at 14.32 hours on 31st December 2022. A critical incident continues to be declared as of 16:00 hours on Friday 6 January 2023.
The Derbyshire health and care system saw new levels of demand for services during the Christmas bank holiday period and this has continued with pressure on services still increasing as we move towards the New Year bank holiday weekend. Our system is working together to manage this steep rise in demand across all services from people contacting NHS 111 or going to their GP, to those coming into our Urgent Treatment Centres or being brought by ambulance into our Emergency Departments. We are also seeing an impact on our social care system which means that we cannot always discharge patients at the time they become medically fit to leave because of pressure on the services that care for people outside of hospital.
We’re asking for your help for those that don’t need to be in hospital – support your loved one to come home from hospital.
The Derbyshire health and social care system is under sustained and significant pressure and patients and members of the public are asked to use services wisely to ensure those patients with the greatest need can access the right care and support.
The Derbyshire health and care system has taken the decision to stand down the critical incident that was called earlier this week. This is after identified actions had been deployed and had seen reductions in pressure in some services. Services remain under sustained and significant pressure, and patients and members of the public continue to be asked to use services wisely to ensure those patients with the greatest need can access care and support.
The Derbyshire health and care system continues to be exceptionally busy, and the declaration of critical incident remains in place while dealing with significant and sustained demand for services.
Despite pressures on the NHS, members of the public are being asked to continuing to access the NHS for care in the usual manner
The Derbyshire health and care system continues to be exceptionally busy, continuing to declare a critical incident while dealing with significant and sustained demand for services. The critical incident had been declared on Tuesday 20th December to help clinically prioritise care and maintain safe services for patients.
Derbyshire County Council want to make sure that health care appointments are as easy to access as possible for Derbyshire residents.
That’s why they’re running a new scheme offering free transport to a variety of routine health appointments including vaccination appointments and some screening programmes.