NHS is testing mental health A & E with a “calm and welcome” environment to solve overcrowding.
This new unit will deal with patients who commit suicide without “noise and chaos” in normal hospitals or experience psychosis or mania.
The troops, which have been trialed across 10 NHS Trusts, are open 24 hours a day, 24 hours a day, and welcome the work -in with what the police or GPS mentions.
The staff, who have been trained doctors and nurses, are part of the 10 -year NHS plan and can be expanded nationwide.
The idea behind the mental health A & E is to solve the “corridor management” crisis and cause terrible treatment all over the country.
The patient has been reported to be dying in A & E corridor and waiting room without pain.
In January, the sun reported that a 95 -year -old woman with dementia died in the corridor without proper equipment and could not end.
Other patients died under the court in the waiting room, and they were not found after a few hours because they were too busy to pass.
According to hourThe unit will aim to solve the root cause of the mental health crisis.
Trial A & E is a miniature pin called Maxwell and MITSI.
Pooches hug the patient and have a tray full of tea, coffee and biscuits.
Toti Freysson, a mental health nurse who manages services at Ladbroke Grove in London, London, said anyone walking in 10 minutes can see it.
In 2024, 1.7 million patients had to wait at least 12 hours in A & E.
The long waiting was associated with thousands of deaths.
Mental health patients have twice the probability of experiencing a long atmosphere, and some have reported that they are waiting for 18 days to get beds.
West London Mental Health Site has reported about 300 patients a month.
There are three bedrooms and the patient can stay for several days without being detained according to the mental health law.
Dr. Mehtab Rahman, a consultant psychiatrist at the center, told THE TIMES. “Often A & E is the most inappropriate place for mental health patients. They are people who are listening to their heads.
Mental Health Minister, Baroness Merron, told THE Sun: “People who are so often in a mental health crisis do not have the eligible for support or treatment, so it is important for us to continue to provide these services.”
“With £ 660 million government funding this year, we are shifting mental health services. We invest 26 million pounds in the new mental health crisis center, employ more employees, provide more dialogue, and put down the list of waiting.
“In addition, the proposed reforms of mental health laws will allow people with the most serious mental health to receive better personalized treatment.”
Children’s commissioner DAME RACHEL de Souza comes after urgent actions to solve the waiting time for children’s mental health.
958,200 children uk It was mentioned in the spirit of children and youth health service last year.
Anxiety was the most common reason, and the conditions for neurological development were followed. autism.
The fragile patient left for 50 hours and left for a feces and employees at the busy A & E ‘Cry by phone to get help.’
By Isabel Show
The weak patients of Kent Hospital said that there was no one who could help in the bathroom, “told the soil on my own,” employees said.
In Gillingham’s Medway Maritime Hospital, the patient waited for more than 50 hours without using the basic washing facility.
Some have been left by “sitting in their stool” Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspectors.
One patient said:
Jayne Black, the chief executive of Medway NHS Foundation Trust, who runs the hospital, apologized to the patients and said that it has been improved since then.
During the February 2024 inspection, CQC found serious problems in the emergency room.
The prosecutors were found to be overcrowded with departments, 14 patients were full of resuscitation areas for nine, and the other 15 were treated in the hallway.
This department is described as “not suitable for the number of people.”
no way CQC Report Patients published on March 5 said the staff said, “I’m crying by phone to ask for help.”
One patient said, “I sat in a chair of the hall and sat for 55 hours.” When I asked the staff if I could take a shower, I was told that I could only wash water with water in the bathroom sink.