Monitor
Printable version E-mail this to a friend

More patients waiting in NHS A&E departments

In the period to the end of June more foundation trusts (FTs) were missing targets to see patients within four hours of them arriving at A&E.

A quarterly report on the health of the foundation trust sector by the health sector regulator has found that twice as many trusts missed this target compared with the same period in 2012/13 (31 in 2013/14 compared with 13 the year before).

In the first quarter of 2013/14 38 per cent of acute foundation trusts failed to meet the target compared with 16 per cent in the first quarter of 2012/13. This suggests that trusts faced prolonged winter pressures.

The regulator is now working with NHS England and the NHS Trust Development Authority to support trusts with their plans to counter pressures this winter.

Monitor's tracking of FTs’ financial performance shows that in total trusts are breaking even or in surplus. However, a significant number of individual trusts are in deficit – including 19 trusts who have never reported a deficit before. Forty-eight FTs were in deficit in quarter one, compared with 36 in the same period last year.

The overall deficit was £74million. This figure is mostly due to a small number of particularly financially troubled trusts.

The report from Monitor also suggests that FTs are struggling to deliver their efficiency savings. During the first quarter of 2013/14, trusts generated £57 million (or 19 per cent) less in cost savings than originally planned. Monitor’s analysis suggests that increased demand for services forced trusts to curtail planned savings on pay and supplies.

Despite the shortfall on planned cost savings, financial performance was ahead of plan with the sector reporting an overall surplus of £27 million. Revenue was 9 per cent more than expected because of increased demand for hospital services.

Jason Dorsett, Finance, Reporting and Risk Director at Monitor, said: "Our analysis of returns from foundation trusts shows that patients are still waiting too long at A&Es in a number of foundation trusts.

"Increased demand means more than ever that trusts need better and earlier planning.

"The increased demand has also prevented trusts from delivering their planned financial savings. We expect to see trusts planning now for how the increased demand will impact on their finances, so that they are not storing up trouble for the future."

Ends

Notes to editors

  1. For media enquiries contact Nick Burke, on 0207 340 2434 (nicholas.burke@monitor.gov.uk)
  2. The Performance of the foundation trust sector report, which summarises the key trends drawn from individual reports of the 146 foundation trusts up to 30 June 2013, is available here.
  3. Monitor is the sector regulator of NHS-funded health care services and its main duty is to protect and promote the interests of patients. More information about Monitor's role can be found here
  4. Information about Monitor's role can be found here.
  5. Follow us on Twitter - @MonitorUpdate

Public Service Insights: Effectively Onboarding New Employees With An Intranet