Action Taken
The Department of Health and Social Care acknowledges concerns about ambulance pressures and details significant ongoing actions, including an additional £3.3 billion investment, increased bed capacity, a £500 million discharge fund, and targeted support for hospitals to improve ambulance handover delays and expand the paramedic workforce. (AI summary)
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Dear Mr Morris, Thank you for your letter of 24 June 2022 to the then Secretary of State, the Rt Hon Sajid Javid, about the death of Grenville Wait. I am replying as Minister with responsibility for Health and Secondary Care and thank you for the additional time to respond. Firstly, I would like to say how saddened I was to read of the circumstances of Mr Wai(s death, and I offer my sincere condolences to his family and loved ones. The circumstances your report describes are very concerning and I am grateful to you for bringing these matters to my attention. In preparing this response, Departmental officials have made enquiries with NHS England and the Care Quality Commission (CQC). The Government is committed to supporting the ambulance service to manage the pressures i_t is facing, ensuring that people receive the treatment that they need when they need it. A range of measures are in place to improve ambulance performance. This will be supported by the government investing an additional £3.3 bilfion in each of 2023-24 and 2024-25 as announced in the Autumn Statement. This will enable rapid action to improve urgent and emergency care performance towards pre-pandemic levels. The NHS will also set out detailed recovery plans in the new year, including plans to improve ambulance response times and improve A&E waiting times. The NHS has set out a plan to substantially increase capacity and resilience this winter. Bed capacity will be increased by the equivalent of at least 7,000 general and acute beds, alongside a £500 million Adult Social Care Discharge Fund, helping improve patient flow through hospital and reduce long waits in handing ambulance patients to A&E, getting ambulances swiftly back on the road. Further winter actions include establishing 24/7 System Control Centres in all local systems to better manage demand at a system level, and expanding falls response services right across the country, which will see local teams sent to help people who have fallen in their home or in care homes, rather than unnecessary trips to hospital. Addressing ambulance handover delays is also a key priority. NHS England is providing targeted support to some of the hospitals facing the greatest delays in the handover of ambulance patients into the care of hospitals, helping them to identify short and longer-term interventions to improve delays and get ambulances swiftly back out on the road. This is
, alongside a new national Winter Improvement Collaborative programme to help other trusts identify the root causes of handover delays and implement best practice. NHS England has allocated £150 million of additional system funding for ambulance service pressures in 2022/23, supporting improvements to response times through additional call handler recruitment, retention, and other funding pressures. This is alongside £20 million to upgrade the ambulance fleet. The Government has also made significant investments in the ambulance workforce and the number of NHS ambulance staff and support staff has increased by almost 40% since April
2010. Health Education England has a mandated target to train 3,000 paramedic graduates nationally per annum from 2021-2024, further increasing the domestic paramedic workforce to meet future demands on the service. I hope this response is helpful and you are assured that we will continue to work with the NHS to ensure the ambulance service has the support it needs to deliver for patients, both through winter pressures and beyond. Thank you for bringing these concerns to my attention.