People's views on A&E waiting times

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Summary of report content

To inform the NHS Long Term Plan, and the review of clinical standards, Healthwatch England have been looking at what factors people think are most important when visiting A&E and how these could be used to support a more meaningful measure of performance. 

Here we draw on two main sources of evidence:

  • Feedback gathered by the Healthwatch network from almost 6,500 people between January 2016 and September 2018, covering A&E departments in 25 different local areas.
  • National polling of a representatives group of 2,000 adults from across the country on what they think matters most when visiting A&E (conducted in January 2019).

These findings are being published today to coincide with the announcement from NHS England about plans to test a new set of performance measures in A&E.

This process of testing is essential to ensure that the proposed measures have a positive impact on clinical outcomes, patient safety and people’s experiences of care.

Ultimately, the aim must be to create a trusted measure that helps track hospital performance that is of use to both professionals and the public.

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General details

Local Healthwatch
Healthwatch England
Publication date
Date evidence capture began
Date evidence capture finished
Key themes
Service organisation, delivery, change and closure
Staffing - levels and training
Waiting times- punctuality and queuing on arrival

Methodology and approach

Was the work undertaken in partnership with another organisation?
No
Primary research method used
Survey
If an Enter and View methodology was applied, was the visit announced or unannounced?
N/A

Details of health and care services included in the report

Details of health and care services included in the report
Emergency department (inc A&E)

Details of people who shared their views

Number of people who shared their views
8,500
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