Rise in people requiring emergency hospital treatment in South Tyneside revealed

The surge of people in South Tyneside requiring hospital treatment this winter has only just begun, a health boss has warned.
Members of the emergency department team at City Hospitals Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust.Members of the emergency department team at City Hospitals Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust.
Members of the emergency department team at City Hospitals Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust.

New figures have revealed that almost 5,600 people in the borough required emergency hospital treatment in December – an increase of 16% from a year earlier.

Despite many people returning to work this week after the festive period, hospitals are bracing themselves for a sustained rise in pressure throughout this month and beyond.

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The increase in emergency care attendances reported by South Tyneside NHS Foundation Trust in December was the second-highest in the North East, behind only North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust (26%).

But the pressure on hospitals is not expected to ease any time soon.

Ken Bremner, chief executive of South Tyneside NHS Foundation Trust and City Hospitals Sunderland, said: “The last few weeks have been an extremely busy and challenging time, not only here in South Tyneside and Sunderland, but across the region as a whole.

“NHS staff have worked relentlessly and beyond the call of duty to provide safe patient care, despite the extreme demands on services. We should all be extremely proud of the way in which teams are pulling together, often across organisational boundaries, to effective manage these pressures together and in the very best interests of patient care.

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“Although the festivities are over, this is really just the start of the busy winter period for the NHS and for the thousands of NHS staff who work across the region. All trusts have already done a great deal of planning and preparation to make sure we continue to cope well with the influx of very poorly patients that we expect to see at this time of year.”

In South Tyneside, there were 4,828 emergency attendances at hospitals in December 2016, compared to 5,597 last month – a rise of 16%.

Health bosses are urging those who are experiencing flu-like symptoms to stay away from hospitals, with seasonal flu and winter vomiting bug ‘norovirus’ circulating in communities.

For those who are otherwise fit and healthy, symptoms should clear up with good self-care, resting, drinking plenty of fluids and taking over the counter medication.

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Before deciding to attend hospital, people are advised to call NHS 111 for advice, while there are also more GP appointments available.

For detailed information of all available services, visit www.urgentoremergency.co.uk.