By Lauren Monaghan, Junior Local Democracy Reporter
East Midlands Ambulance Service hold-ups linked to the handover of patients to hospitals have again increased.
There were 12,872 ambulance service hours lost hours in May, 3,618 hours over target, new figures show.
A further 13,084 hours were lost in June, marking two consecutive months above target.
In daily terms, 436 hours were lost a day in June to handovers greater than 15 minutes, which is an improvement on the 620 hours lost a day in February for the same timeframe.
Nottinghamshire hospitals, however, were not the main source of lost hours.
Northamptonshire hospitals meant that they made up for 25 per cent of all lost hours, with Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) being the second highest at 18.5 per cent and Leicester hospitals at 15 per cent.
East Midlands Ambulance Service (EMAS) covers across Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire and Lincolnshire.
The service has been facing increased pressures linked to busy hospitals taking longer to accept ambulance patients when crews arrive at accident and emergency departments, which in turn can affect response times.
Speaking at an EMAS Trust board meeting on Tuesday (July 9) Richard Henderson, Chief Executive, questioned whether the delays in Northamptonshire was due to the deterioration of their hospitals or other trusts in the region improving.
Ben Holdaway, Director of Operations, said: “A combination of both, it’s fair to say NUH has got better, as has Leicester.”
NUH’s improvements compared with Northamptonshire may be due to regular meetings within the trust, the board heard.
Keeley Sheldon, Director of Quality Improvement and Patient Safety, said: “There’s fortnightly system meetings to look at [NUH’S] current performance but with a quality lens to it… equally a fortnightly catchup with their chief nurse, so regular dialogue to support any escalations.
“When it was quite hot in the winter months, [NUH] crews have a really good reporting culture now so we are really confident that we are escalating when we have got issues so we can evidence base that we can take improvements.”
However, hospitals across the region appear to fall victim to random incident and patient spikes, with a lack of resources driving up handover wait times.
Ben Holdaway said: “In the latter half of June we had that hotter spike and it stands out the impact it has on delivery.
“We saw hospitals struggle to cope… there’s just no fat on the bone, you can’t afford even a bad couple of days.”