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Hospital patients collapsing while out of sight on corridors, NHS watchdog says

2 days ago
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Patients are collapsing in hospitals unseen by staff because overcrowding means they are stranded out of sight on corridors, the NHS’s safety watchdog has revealed,Using corridors, storerooms and gyms as extra care areas poses serious risks to patients, including falls, infections and a lack of oxygen, the Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) said,NHS staff told investigators that some patients who end up on a trolley or bed in overflow areas have not been assessed or started treatment “and so may be at increased risk of deterioration, which may go unnoticed or be detected late in a temporary care environment,” HSSIB’s report said,It highlighted that patients in these areas are at risk of not getting prompt attention if they deteriorate and suffer a medical emergency,“Several nurses shared a patient safety concern around calling for help and responding to a medical emergency in temporary care environments,” the report said.

“They said this was because the patient may be at the end of a corridor and in many cases out of the line of sight of the central part of the emergency department.“A few incidents where patients had collapsed in a temporary care environment were reported to the investigation,” said HSSIB.While their presence in an overflow area did not affect their outcome, “there were concerns about the impact it had on the timeliness of the emergency response.”The Royal College of Nursing, which warned last year that patients on corridors were dying, said the report was “a damning indictment” of what HSSIB says is increasingly routine use of corridor care.Some hospitals are so worried about the potential for harm that they have installed emergency call bells in overflow areas so patients and staff can raise the alarm in an emergency, HSSIB said.

Installing call bells, plug sockets to power medical equipment and mini nursing stations in overflow areas makes them “calmer” and more organised for patients and staff, HSSIB said.But other hospitals are not taking those steps because they do not want care in such areas – which can also include offices and family rooms – to become “normalised”, it added.HSSIB also found that while some hospitals try to ensure that patients spend only an hour or less in a temporary care environment, that can become several days, because of a lack of beds.The Royal College of Emergency Medicine, which represents A&E doctors, estimates that more than 16,600 people died in England last year as a direct result of delays in finding them a bed after arriving at A&E.NHS England says that corridor care is “unacceptable and should never be considered standard”.

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, has pledged to end the practice by 2029, though NHS staff groups are sceptical he will do so.A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “No one should receive care in a corridor.“The situation we inherited is unacceptable and undignified, and we are determined to end it.That is why NHS England is working closely with trusts to reduce variation, tackle inconsistencies, improve data collection and reduce discharge delays, alongside social care colleagues.“Staff are under immense pressure, and this report highlights the dedication and professionalism of those who are keeping patients safe and delivering the best care they can.

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politicsSee all
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Labour’s swift pubs U-turn shows government learning – and repeating Treasury mistakes

Political U-turns come in various forms, and as news of the latest government reversal drifted out, this one connected to the plight of the pub trade, Labour MPs could take comfort in one thing: at least it happened quickly.While last summer’s change of stance on benefit reforms was forced on Downing Street by open rebellion, and those for pensioners’ winter fuel payments and inheritance tax for farmers followed months of dissent, the decision to revisit decisions on business rates took a matter of weeks.“It would have been better if we hadn’t done it at all, but at least it was reversed quickly,” said one MP about the promised new look at business rates valuations, which the hospitality trade say would have seen major increases for pubs and hotels.“Maybe they are learning. And to give the government credit, they have been in proper listening mode over this

about 24 hours ago
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Software tackling deepfakes to be piloted for Scottish and Welsh elections

Election officials are working “at speed” with the Home Office on a pilot project to combat the use of deepfakes to target candidates standing in this year’s Scottish and Welsh elections.Officials at the Electoral Commission in Scotland said they and the Home Office expected software capable of detecting AI-generated deepfake videos and images to be operational before election campaigns begin in late March.Sarah Mackie, the commission’s chief in Scotland, said that if the software detected a hoax video or image, officials would contact the police, the candidate concerned and inform the public, although she acknowledged it could not always provide 100% certainty.They would then urge the social media platform to take the content down, she said. However, because such action is currently voluntary, the commission also wants legally enforceable “takedown” powers that would require media platforms to remove hoax material

about 24 hours ago
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Badenoch claims forthcoming business rates U-turn for pubs ‘too little, too late’ – as it happened

We don’t yet know the extent of the government U-turn shortly to be announced related to business rates for pubs and other parts of the hospitality sector. (See 2.24pm.)But Kemi Badenoch is already saying it is “too little, too late”. In a post on social media, she says:Yesterday Keir Starmer told us Labour had ‘turned a corner

1 day ago
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‘Go back home’: Farage schoolmate accounts bring total alleging racist behaviour to 34

Thirty-four school contemporaries of Nigel Farage have now come forward to claim they saw him behave in a racist or antisemitic manner, raising fresh questions over the Reform leader’s evolving denials.One of those with new allegations is Jason Meredith, who was three years below Farage at Dulwich college, a private school in south-east London. He claims that Farage called him a “paki” and would use taunts such as “go back home”.Meredith, 58, who is of Anglo-Indian heritage and has lived in Switzerland where he works as a product manager since 1999, said it was support for anti-racism that motivated him to come forward.He told the Guardian: “What really irked me was the denial [by Farage] of being racist

1 day ago
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Farage accused of ‘parroting Kremlin lines’ after remarks on UK troops in Ukraine

Nigel Farage has been accused of “parroting Kremlin lines” after saying that he would vote against any UK government plans to deploy the military in Ukraine.On Tuesday, Britain and France said they would be ready to send troops to Ukraine after a peace deal, but the Reform UK leader said he would vote against any such move to put boots on the ground.Farage’s comments cast doubt on his commitment to the UK’s national security, the cabinet minister Pat McFadden said. He accused the politician of taking a pro-Russia stance on the issue, which he said should give voters “pause for thought”.“This guarantee is not just for Ukraine, it’s for the whole of Europe,” he said

1 day ago
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Mandelson accuses European leaders of ‘histrionic’ reaction to Trump’s Greenland stance

Peter Mandelson has accused European leaders including Keir Starmer of a “histrionic” reaction to Donald Trump’s plan to take over Greenland, arguing that without “hard power and hard cash” they will continue to slide into unimportance in the “age of Trump”.In his first political comments since being sacked as Britain’s ambassador to Washington last year, Lord Mandelson said Trump had achieved “more in a day than orthodox diplomacy was able to achieve in the past decade” when he captured the Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro.The intervention is likely to be seen as a criticism of the British prime minister, who has attempted to walk a diplomatic tightrope since the US captured Maduro. This week he signed a statement calling on the US president to respect Danish sovereignty over Greenland after a White House statement said the US was looking into “a range of options” in an effort to acquire Greenland, adding that using the US military to do so was “always an option”.On Wednesday evening, Starmer “set out his position on Greenland” in a phone conversation with Trump, Downing Street said without giving further details of the call

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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One Battle After Another and The Studio lead Actor awards nominations

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Kimmel on Trump’s whitewashing of January 6 anniversary: ‘Don’t give in to this revisionist history’

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Dolly, Dreamgirls and Daniel Radcliffe: the biggest Broadway shows of 2026

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Jon Stewart on Trump’s military intervention in Venezuela: ‘This is all exhausting’

3 days ago
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‘I wanted that Raiders of the Lost Ark excitement – you could die any minute’: how we made hit video game Prince of Persia

4 days ago
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The Guide #224: Bondage Bronte, to more comeback tours – what will be 2026’s big cultural hitters ?

6 days ago