Morecambe Bay NHS trust, which operates three hospitals across north Lancashire and southern Cumbria, declared a Covid-19 critical incident last night following “relentless and sustained pressure” caused by “unprecedented staff absences”.

In an internal memo leaked to the Sunday Times, the trust’s chief executive, Aaron Cummins, said the move would lead to operations and appointments cancelled and staff redeployed which would allow the hospitals to “maintain safe services” for patients.

The trust, which operates three sites – Furness general hospital in Barrow, the Royal Lancaster infirmary and Westmorland general hospital in Kendal – joins at least six other trusts which are understood to have issued alerts over “internal critical incidents” in recent days, including United Lincolnshire hospitals NHS trust.

The note warned that staff absences had jumped from 7% to 10% in the last week – equating to around 240 NHS employees unable to work, with around 120 patients who were well enough to leave hospital but were unable to. “The impact of this is that seriously sick patients are waiting too long to be admitted and there are many times when we are operating on a ‘one in, one out basis’”, Cummins added.

Sakthi Karunanithi, the director of public health for Lancashire, said the region was “bracing ourselves for a tsunami of Omicron cases in Lancashire, including in older age groups”. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that “from a local point of view”, it appears the government were using science as “a side dish that we can pick and choose” and “turning a blind eye to signals of distress from the frontline that doesn’t often get presented in dashboards, like the staff absences”.

He went on:

Boosters on [their] own should not be the front and centre of the strategy. We need to stop pretending we can boost our way out of this pandemic and start seriously thinking about keeping the infection levels as low as we possibly can by truly engaging with communities and the public, seeing … what we’re seeing and supporting businesses and supporting local services to carry on doing their main jobs during this crisis.

Source: Guardian

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