Busiest year on record for emergency services as winter flu puts pressure on services

NHS staff experienced the busiest year on record for A&E and ambulance services last year, new figures show, as flu continues to pile pressure on hospitals into 2025.

There was an average of 5,407 patients a day in hospital with flu last week, including 256 in critical care – 3.5 times higher than the same week last year (1,548 w/e 7 January 2024). A number of trusts this week have declared critical incidents, citing exceptional demand caused by the colder weather and respiratory viruses.

Covid, RSV and norovirus cases remained high with more than 1,100 patients in hospital with Covid every day last week, as well as 626 patients with norovirus – up almost 50% on the same week last year (424). There was also an average of 72 children in hospital with RSV every day, up 47% from last year (49).

Services prepared for this anticipated increase by ensuring 102,546 general and acute beds were open last week, up from 101,309 the week before.

NHS teams have also delivered a total of 29 million flu, Covid and RSV vaccines since the autumn campaign kicked off, and while the national vaccination booking system has now closed, those eligible can still get protected by visiting a COVID-19 walk-in vaccination site or finding a pharmacy offering the flu vaccine.

Monthly data confirmed that 2024 was the busiest year ever for A&E and ambulance services in England – with December recording the highest number of ambulance incidents ever in one month.

Ambulance teams handled 806,405 incidents in December taking the total number for 2024 to 8.94 million – around 1 in 14 more than the previous year (8.35 million in 2023).

A&Es were also hit by unprecedented demand this year with 2.35 million attendances in December, bringing the total number of attendances in 2024 to 27.42 million – the busiest year for A&Es ever recorded and 7.1% higher than in 2023 (25.61 million).

Despite this influx, NHS staff continued to deliver improvements for patients, seeing around 150,000 more patients within the four-hour target in December when compared to last year (71.1% of patients in 2024 vs 69.5% in 2023).

Thanks to measures like surgical hubs and community diagnostic centres keeping planned care protected from winter pressure, the NHS delivered 1.56 million elective treatments in November – the highest ever number of treatments delivered each day across the month (74,129) and 5% more compared to the same month before the pandemic (1.48 million in November 2019).

The waiting list continued to fall in November, down 61,413 to 7.48 million - the lowest the waiting list has been since May 2023. The estimated number of patients waiting in November was 6.28 million.

The longest waits have also fallen again, with the number waiting more than 18 weeks (3.06 million) down almost 4% since last year (3.18 million), with the number waiting over a year almost half its peak following the pandemic (221,889 vs 436,127 in March 2021). The proportion of patients seen within 18 weeks was 59.1%.

For the past eight months in a row, the NHS has delivered the most diagnostic activity for that month ever recorded, with 2.44 million tests and checks delivered in November 2024 – a fifth more than pre-pandemic (2.02 million in November 2019).

In November, the NHS met the cancer faster diagnosis standard again, with 77% of people getting the all clear or a cancer diagnosis within four weeks. Thanks to the efforts of staff, record numbers of people continue to be referred for checks – with over 3 million checks over the last year and more than 650,000 cancer treatments delivered to patients, with more than 9 in 10 people starting within a month.

Professor Sir Stephen Powis, NHS National Medical Director, said: “It is clear that hospitals are under exceptional pressure at the start of this new year, with mammoth demand stemming from this ongoing cold weather snap and respiratory viruses like flu – all on the back of 2024 being the busiest year on record for A&E and ambulance teams.

“I never fail to be impressed by the remarkable job that NHS staff across a range of services in the face of current challenges, remaining compassionate, professional and doing everything they can to see patients as quickly as possible while often working in hospitals that are full to bursting. It is hard to quantify just through the data how tough it is for frontline staff at the moment – with some staff working in A&E saying that their days at work feel like some of the days we had during the height of the pandemic.

“That hard work and resilience from staff, alongside vital tools like surgical hubs and community diagnostic centres that keep planned care isolated from winter pressure, meant the waiting list fell again in November to 7.48 million, with the NHS delivering 5% more activity than the same period pre-pandemic.

“As the incredibly busy winter continues and hospitals clearly experience intense pressure, please do continue to only use 999 and A&E in life-threatening emergencies and use NHS 111 and 111 online for other conditions, as well as using your local GP and pharmacy services in the usual way.”

Commenting on the NHS monthly performance statistics and Urgent and Emergency Care Situation Reports, Tim Gardner, Assistant Director of Policy at the Health Foundation, said: “NHS trusts declaring critical incidents this week serve as a stark reminder of how difficult winter has become for our health service.

"The statistics show another slight but welcome drop in the waiting list and the number of very long waits for routine treatment in November 2024. This, however, is in sharp contrast to the intense pressures now facing urgent and emergency care services, including near-record numbers of patients spending over 12 hours in A&E before being admitted to a hospital bed.

“The root cause of long delays in and outside of A&E departments is that hospitals were already close to gridlock, even before the expected surges in demand from flu and other viruses. While December saw over 100,000 bed days lost to flu, over three times as many were lost to delayed discharges in the same period, partly due to problems arranging suitable social care and other community-based services.  

“As well as highlighting the enormous challenge facing the government to recover the 18-week elective care standard by the end of this Parliament, the latest stats also reiterate that meeting this goal shouldn’t come at the expense of other vital health and care services. Improvements need to be made across the system, including investment in additional capacity in both primary and acute care, new technology and skills to streamline services and boost productivity, as well as long overdue reform and investment in social care.” 

References

  1. NHS Performance Statistics: https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/
  2. Urgent and Emergency Care Situation Reports: https://www.england.nhs.uk/statistics/statistical-work-areas/uec-sitrep/urgent-and-emergency-care-daily-situation-reports-2024-25/

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