The NHSâs backlog of care would not be as bad if the government had given it permission to expand the number of hospital beds in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, the head of the health service has suggested.
In July 2020 the NHS sought 10,000 ânon-temporaryâ hospital beds to deal with recovery from the first wave of the crisis and the future surges in case numbers.
But the request was denied by the Treasury and Number 10.
Giving evidence to the UK Covid-19 Public Inquiry, NHS England chief executive Amanda Pritchard said that the decision was âdisappointingâ and that the nation âcould be in a different positionâ when it comes to the backlog of pre-planned hospital care.
According to the latest data from NHS England, an estimated 7.64 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of August, relating to 6.42 million patients.
The list hit a record high in September 2023 with 7.77 million treatments and 6.50 million patients.
The inquiry also heard that going into the pandemic, hospital bed capacity in England was lower than many comparable countries around the world.
Counsel to the inquiry Jacqueline Carey KC, said: âIn July of 2020, NHS England sought 10,000 non-temporary beds to deal with recovery and the potential future surges ⌠the funding for those beds was not approved by Her Majestyâs Treasury.â
Ms Pritchard said: âWe had done some modelling work over that summer to looking at from a best estimate, what it would take to be able to run with a sort of constant number of patients in the service who were Covid positive, create the necessary headroom then to respond to normal winter pressures, but crucially also to have the space to do the, not just urgent, but also non-urgent, non-Covid work, so that we would be able to do that recovery work that weâd begun to start in the summer.â
Ms Carey said: âI think the Prime Ministerâs private office was involved in the decision to refuse and said, effectively, they wanted more use to be made of Nightingales, the independent sector, to go back to discharging patients if necessary, using flu vaccinations to hopefully deal with any flu upsurge there would be, and that there would be capacity looked at in the Spending Review⌠What were the consequences of that 10,000 bed requests being refused, from your perspective?â
Ms Pritchard replied: âIt was, as you say, very disappointing, because what it meant in practice is that where we could now be in, I think, a very different position on elective recovery.
âIf we had had that capacity, we could certainly have treated thousands more patients if we had had that additional headroom, as well as being more resilient going into the second wave and into winter more generally.
âSo subsequent to the pandemic, there have been some steps taken to increase core bed capacity, but clearly we could have done with that capacity at the time, and I think weâd be in a quite different position now.â
The pandemic probe also heard about the extreme pressures on the service during January 2021, including how patients were sent from Cumbria to Newcastle and from Kent to Oxford for care.
She said that the second wave was âcompletely terrifying at timesâ and how some hospitals were âright on the edgeâ of âcrit con fourâ at times.
âI was talking to people who were in hospitals, in intensive care units, who were describing some of the same things youâve heard from witness testimony ⌠and we were very close, at times, very close.â
Ms Carey asked: âWhen you say we were âvery closeâ or âright on the edgeâ, to use your words, does that mean running out of beds in any particular hospital and indeed region?â
Ms Pritchard replied: âYes.â
Ms Carey added: âIf I suggested to you we were on the brink at times in January 2021, would you disagree?â
Ms Pritchard replied: âNo.â
The inquiry heard that Ms Pritchardâs statement âmade clearâ that there were three occasions when she was concerned critical care would exceed capacity â March 2020, winter 2020 to 2021, and winter 2021 to 2022.
Ms Carey said the statement also highlighted that âthere clearly were some spare beds available throughout most of the pandemicâ, but as other witnesses have said âitâs not just about the bed, itâs about the quality and the detail of care that is providedâ.
She asked if Ms Pritchard thought âthere was an overreliance on the data, presenting a rosier pictureâ.
Ms Pritchard disagreed, replying: âIâm confident in saying there wasnât for us.
âAnd in all of the conversations we were having with government, we were really clear about what people were actually experiencing, and certainly colleagues of mine were inviting in, making arrangements for journalists to film in our critical care units and in our hospitals to try and help the public understand what extraordinary length staff were going to.â
The inquiry was shown a document outlining the costs of the temporary Nightingale hospitals which were set up at seven locations in response to the crisis.
The probe was shown a document detailing the costs of the programme.
Ms Carey said: âIf one takes London as a starting point, it was approved on March 23. It went operational on April 3. But during wave one, 57 patients were admitted.
âIt was open for admissions from April to May 2020, then on standby. And during wave two, it was not used to admit Covid-19 patients, but 71 non-Covid 19 patients were treated.
âAnd we can see there that from January 11 2021 it was used as a mass Covid-19 vaccination centre until late June 2021.
âSet up ÂŁ77 million, ÂŁ9 million to run, just over ÂŁ5 million to decommission. Total cost ÂŁ132 million.â
Ms Carey highlighted that the programme cost more than ÂŁ358 million, and asked Ms Pritchard if she thought âthat was a useful resource that was available to the NHS, albeit one that was very little used to treat Covid-19 patientsâ.
Ms Pritchard replied: Yes is a simple answer. Because, when we were at the beginning of this process, making decisions about opening these unprecedented field hospitals, because thatâs what weâre talking about, we went into this expecting to need them.
âWe didnât have community prevalence data, we only had the data, which was the rear view mirror about patients who were in hospital at the time.
âSo it was much more uncertain than it became later on, when we could predict much more accurately what was likely to happen.
âBut the doubling rates looked like we were going to be in a situation where we would hit a maximum operational, even with the surge that weâve talked about, capacity.
âAnd if we had not had this kind of facility available at that time, this inquiry would be having a very different kind of conversation if we had ended up in that kind of scenario where we would have been unable to treat, potentially many, many thousands of patients.â
Asked what the NHS could do to ensure there is more critical care capacity in the event of a respiratory pandemic such as Covid-19, Ms Pritchard said: âA bed is not a bed, a bed is a physical space yes, but itâs got staff, itâs got medicines, itâs got equipment.
âAnd all of those things are part of what I think forms that future resilience narrative, and that future resilience ask, which clearly, Iâve already said we didnât have headroom going into the pandemic, and that has not materially changed as we stand now.â
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