Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Hospital bed-boarding

Patients are being put at risk in Scotland by a lack of consultants and a shortage of acute hospital beds the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (RCPE) has highlighted. A growing number of patients are being forced to stay in wards not designed to cater for their illness in a practice known as “bed-boarding”. Doctors say this delays treatment and increases the time patients stay in hospital, making them more likely to contract a superbug, like MRSA, or suffer from blood clots.

Eight out of ten physicians questioned for the survey say bed-boarding takes place year-round, and every expert said the practice had a negative impact on the quality of care patients receive. Seven out of ten RCPE members say putting patients in inappropriate wards has a negative impact on death rates and that it increases the chances of a patient being readmitted to hospital due to them not getting the correct care during their initial stay.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

And to make matters worse, we can expect an increase in the number of patients needing urgent treatment:
Consumers trying to save money are gambling with their health and risking food poisoning by ignoring use-by dates on food, according to research published by the government's food watchdog.
In an effort to spend less and make their food go further, many are also keeping leftovers for longer than the recommended limit of two days in the fridge:
http://tinyurl.com/c26gruh