Terror attack tents could be used if hospitals are overrun with Covid

Hospitals in Covid hotspots ‘may deploy triage tents normally reserved for terror attacks to cope with second wave’ – as startling figures show a QUARTER of NHS sites are treating a dangerous amount of Covid patients

  • Some hospitals in Tier Four regions were dealing with queues of ambulances outside A&Es, medics say 
  • Tents are normally used for a ‘sudden surge of patients from a major incident’ such as a terror attack
  • England’s hospitals are now busier than they were at the peak of the first coronavirus wave, figures show 

Tents used to treat victims of terror attacks could be set up outside hospitals overrun with coronavirus patients, it was claimed today.

NHS trusts operating in virus hotspots are said to be considering the option, with official data showing a quarter of England’s hospitals are now treating a dangerous amount of Covid patients.

Emergency medicine consultant Simon Walsh, who works in north-east London, said some hospitals in Tier Four regions were dealing with queues of ambulances outside A&Es, with a new highly-infectious Covid strain thought to be behind a surge in hospitalisations that has led to England’s hospitals now being busier than they were at the peak of the first wave.

He said some trusts were now considering setting up triage tents normally used in dealing with a ‘sudden surge of patients from a major incident’ such as a terror attack or industrial disaster and treating patients in the car park to stop wards being completely overrun.

His startling comments come after MailOnline’s analysis of NHS England figures revealed at least a fifth of general beds at 37 trusts were filled by coronavirus patients in the week ending December 22. Top experts have warned of a danger zone when Covid levels breach 20 per cent of overall hospital occupancy, with the extra pressure of the disease inevitably forcing health chiefs to cancel non-Covid services. 

Two trusts were even operating at double that threshold during the most recent week, with coronavirus taking up 45 per cent of beds at the Medway NHS Foundation Trust in Kent and four in 10 beds at North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust.

Dr Walsh, who is also deputy chairman of the British Medical Association’s UK consultants committee, said staff are preparing for a ‘worsening, increasing number of admissions’ in the next few weeks as the virus continues to spread.  Britain today recorded 53,135 more coronavirus cases in a record daily high and 414 deaths as the second wave of the disease continues to grow.

Despite the scenes of chaos in the NHS, officials began dismantling Nightingale hospitals today. The Nightingales, built during the first wave at a cost of £220million to the taxpayer, were supposed to be the NHS’ insurance policy in the event hospitals were overrun with patients with the disease.

But only a handful of Covid patients have ever been treated in the hospitals because No10 has struggled to man them with trained staff. 

Tents used to treat victims of terror attacks (like these ones) could be set up outside hospitals overrun with coronavirus patients, it was claimed today

Doctors working on the frontline in London say they are operating under a ‘major incident mode’, with reports of patients in hotspots being treated in ambulances because of a lack of space inside hospital. A row of ambulances are parked up at the A&E entrance to Queen’s Hospital in Romford today

 

Dr Walsh said: ‘Today, many trusts in London and the South East are effectively operating in a major incident mode.

‘They’re having crisis meetings, they’re calling on staff to come in to work if they’re able to on their days off.

‘They are dealing with queues of ambulances outside many emergency departments, often with patients sat in the ambulances for many hours until they can be offloaded into the department because there simply isn’t any space to put them in.

‘The physical space to admit patients is running out, staff are exhausted and suffering from the effects of depression and stress and burnout from simply overworking and not being able to get breaks, working in their days off. 

‘So we really do need a coherent plan from the Government to get us through these next few weeks because at the moment what we’re hearing doesn’t fill us with confidence.’  

Dr Walsh added: ‘What I would implore people to do is to listen to the staff, the doctors and nurses who are working in hospitals and emergency departments across the NHS across the UK. Listen to what they’re saying.

‘We are absolutely clear that the NHS is under unprecedented demand. The NHS is resilient and copes with a lot of very difficult times but the sustained nature of this unprecedented pressure on the NHS and the ambulance service as well is really unprecedented.’ 

He said just because people are not seeing images of patients on trolleys in crowded corridors does not mean hospitals are not overwhelmed, and that infection control measures must be taken into account.

Empty Nightingales torn down ‘because there’s not enough medics to staff them’

Nightingale hospitals are being quietly taken apart as medics warn there are too few doctors and nurses to keep the make-shift facilities open.

Health bosses have already started stripping London’s of its 4,000 beds, ventilators and even signs directing patients to wards, while those in Birmingham and Sunderland are yet to re-open.

An eye-watering £220million of taxpayers’ money was splashed on seven Nightingales amid panic hospitals could be overwhelmed by an influx of Covid-19 patients during the first wave.

But many stood empty for months after ministers hailed them as a ‘solution’ to the Covid-19 crisis when they were opened to much fan-fare during the first months of the pandemic to buffer overwhelmed hospitals.

Intensive care doctors today accused ministers of ignoring warnings staffing was already ‘wafer thin’ in intensive care before splurging on the extra capacity, with little regard as to how they would be run.

And as beds were wheeled away from the flagship Nightingale in London – opened by Prince Charles – figures revealed that Covid-19 hospitalisations in England have surged past the peak of the first wave amid warnings from health chiefs they are back in the ‘eye’ of the Covid storm.   

He said: ‘One of the key things people need to understand is that if they’re not seeing queues of patients in corridors, it’s not because we’re not overwhelmed, it’s because we are at capacity whilst maintaining safety for those patients.’

London A&E doctor Sonia Adesara warned that the capital’s hospitals are very close to being overwhelmed if coronavirus infection rates are not brought under control.

She told BBC Breakfast: ‘The hospitals are extremely busy – we have seen a massive rise in people coming in with Covid-19 over the past week and this is on top of an increase in the non-Covid cases we see at this time of year.

‘Just like the first wave we are also suffering from staff shortages, staff are getting Covid-19 again and it is extremely difficult, the hospitals are very full.

‘The situation is untenable and I think we are very close to becoming overwhelmed.’

It comes as official figures showed a quarter of England’s hospitals were treating a ‘dangerous’ number of Covid patients in the run up to Christmas. 

MailOnline’s analysis of NHS England data reveals at least a fifth of general beds at 37 trusts were filled by Covid patients in the week ending December 22. 

Top experts have warned of a danger zone when coronavirus patients breach 20 per cent of hospital occupancy and the disease starts to impact non-Covid services and drive up the risk of outbreaks on wards. 

Two trusts were even operating at double that threshold during the most recent week, with coronavirus taking up 45 per cent of beds at the Medway NHS Foundation Trust in Kent and four in 10 beds at North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust. 

A third of beds at four other trusts across Kent and London — East Kent Hospitals University Trust (37 per cent), Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells Trust (35 per cent), Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals Trust (34 per cent) and Dartford and Gravesham Trust (33 per cent) — were being used for patients with the disease. But analysts tracking the outbreak fear 14 trusts will breach the threshold 33 per cent threshold by New Year’s Eve.

Coronavirus patients need to be kept in isolation and treated with stringent infection control measures, which requires more staff and man hours and can put additional strain on hospitals. 

It makes keeping Covid occupancy below 20 per cent essential to avoid disrupting other parts of the NHS.

NHS bosses are under huge pressure to keep routine services open this winter after coming under fire for shutting them down in spring to deal with the pandemic, in a move which led to millions of vital tests, appointments and operations being missed. 

Meanwhile, analysis of NHS figures reveals every region of England recorded a rise in Covid hospital patients in the most recent week amid calls from SAGE for a third national lockdown. 

The biggest surge was in London, where the number of beds occupied by Covid patients each day jumped 44 per cent from 1,552 to 2,237.

NHS England boss Sir Simon Stevens has warned the health service is ‘in the eye of the storm’ ahead of the harsh winter months because there are already more Covid patients in English hospitals than there were during the darkest days in April and the second wave is continuing to spiral.  

A total of 20,426 beds were occupied by patients who had tested positive for coronavirus as of 8am on Monday, up from 18,974 on April 12. More than half of England’s 130 major trusts are already more than 90 per cent full and some are seeing Covid admissions double every week, which leaves hospitals little breathing room with the worst of winter ahead of them.

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