Hospitals Under Pressure With Three Times More Flu Patients Than Last Year.
New weekly figures show there were 3,372 more patients in hospital each day last week (97,934) than the same period in 2023 (94,562).
Despite the NHS having over 2,700 more beds compared to same week last year (103,557 vs 100,855) – including 99,887 core beds – bed occupancy is higher, with 94.6% of general and acute beds occupied in the week ending 11 February, up from 93.8% last year.
The weekly data, published on the 15/2/24, shows that there were three times as many flu patients in hospital every day last week (2,390) than in the same week last year (737). While there was an average of 565 patients with norovirus and 3,232 patients with Covid-19 in hospital each day.
An average of 48,482 staff were off work each day last week, including 1,513 absences each day related to Covid-19.
Hospital capacity was exacerbated by 13,776 beds being taken up each day by patients who were medically fit for discharge because of delays sending people home or to other settings like social and community care, up from 13,498 last year.
The NHS started planning for this winter earlier than ever before with robust measures in place to manage demand - including more beds, new ambulances, and expanding measures such as care traffic control centres, virtual wards, urgent community response teams and same day emergency care.
There were 91,225 ambulance handovers to hospital last week, up 17% from 78,241 last year. NHS call handlers also answered 376,597 calls to 111, up 11% from 338,564 on the same week last year.
Urgent and Emergency Care Daily Situation Reports 2023-24