RCEM calculates 268 people are likely to have died each week in 2023 while waiting up to 12 hours for a bed

Almost 14,000 people died needlessly last year in England while waiting in A&E for up to 12 hours a new estimate suggests.

Calculations by the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) based on a large study of excess deaths and waiting times show that 268 people are likely to have died each week in 2023 because of excessive waits in emergency departments.

The estimate used a study of more than 5 million NHS patients published in the Emergency Medicine Journal in 2021, which found one excess death for every 72 patients who spent eight to 12 hours in an A&E department.

The risk of death started to increase after five hours and got worse with longer waiting times, the study found.

  • Corigan
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    3 months ago

    In the US I want to know how many people die from insurance, dragging their feet, or denying things your Dr. Thinks is necessary or just how much worse you gotten waiting for “pre-authorization”.

    I’m sure all the cancer patients who wait 2 to 4 weeks to get their insurance to approve or deny caused a ton of harm. Let’s not mention if your insurance only covers one hospital and you needlessly need to only be stabilized and then shipped there to get any treatment further delaying care.

    Why isn’t it documented how many people insurances kill or cause greater harm too, with their nonmedical opinion.

    Not to mention reducing the capacity of our physicians who have to waste hours fighting denials or doing peer to peers with a doctor in the wrong field.

    I bet it would be hundreds of thousands of deaths…

    • GBU_28
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      3 months ago

      Did I miss it? Which part of the article is about US healthcare?

      • Corigan
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        3 months ago

        Maybe I jumped a step but the article felt like a hit on universal health care and I wanted to spell out how much worse we have it. I feel like this is what everyone points to preventing us from getting universal healthcare, so it’s connected through healthcare itself as a topic.

        Also the UKs healthcare has been a big target for conservative to attack and this is how they do it, underfund, overstress something and then point to it as a failure that needs to be dismantled where it is a product of their own tampering.