Pensioner, 91, spends 39 HOURS on trolley at A&E
NINETY-ONE-YEAR-OLD Hilda Harrison has been left waiting for hours on a hospital trolley – twice.
Mrs Harrison was among the patients lined up along a University Hospital of North Staffordshire corridor when a Sentinel reader photographed the chaotic scene on November 26. That time she spent nine hours in the corridor and less than two months later she was back again for a 30-hour trolley wait.
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Pensioner, 91, spends 39 HOURS on trolley at A&E
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LEFT WAITING: Christine Walley, whose husband's 91-year-old aunt, Hilda Harrison, pictured below, has had two long waits to be seen at the University Hospital of North Stafforshire. Picture: Phil Radcliffe
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BED JAM: How we reported the bed crisis at the hospital back in November.
The first A&E visit happened amid fears she was suffering from hypothermia after falling at her Alsagers Bank home.
After initial checks the doctor never came and in the end her family decided to discharge the pensioner themselves.
Six weeks and five days later, on the morning of January 12, she was admitted by ambulance after another fall, with a suspected broken hip. She was placed on a trolley in a corridor where she waited for an hour to be booked in before spending three-and-a-half hours in the corridor waiting to be moved to an assessment unit, still on the trolley.
She waited in that unit until 11am the next morning to be seen by a doctor for the first time.
That Tuesday evening, she was taken on the same trolley to a holding ward where she was finally given a bed after a 30-hour wait.
Her nephew Keith Walley, aged 68, also of Alsagers Bank, said: "I am disgusted at the way the hospital has treated my aunt and all the other old people left on trolleys in the corridors."
Mr Walley's wife Christine said: "The main concern is if she goes home and topples over again.
"The first time she went to hospital, we sat there from 3pm to midnight, when they announced there had been a major trauma and it was going to be another six hours. It's horrendous."
Chief executive Julia Bridgewater later explained the hospital was working under extreme pressure on the day in question.
But Mrs Harrison's relatives couldn't believe it happened again.
Relatives say they were initially unable to find her because Mrs Harrison was not even registered for an hour.
Mrs Walley, aged 60, said: "She was in the corridor again from 10.30am until about 5pm and when I arrived after work at 6.45pm she had had nothing to eat or drink.
"She didn't see a doctor until the next day. I'm not blaming the staff: they were trying their best and they were all apologising."
Mrs Harrison has been moved to Bucknall Hospital for rehabilitation and is hoping to return home soon.
A spokesman for the University Hospital of North Staffordshire said: "Staff at the hospital are concerned to learn of the issues raised by Mrs Harrison's family.
"We are keen to meet with the family so that they can discuss their concerns directly with us, and we can investigate those issues thoroughly.
"We will, of course, share the findings of any investigation directly with them."







5 Comments
by sharon whiston, stoke
Monday, February 23 2009, 2:10PM
“The management seem to think that this is acceptable as atleast they are not kept in ambulances like other hospitals! It is a disgrace, moving to a new site will not help its just shifting the problem, this is happening time and time again and nothing is being done to stop it happening- go to a&e any night or day of the week and you will see these horrific, undignified, and degrading scenes!! And yes i do speak of personal experience- my mother died after being admitted with a stroke and still being kept waiting for 9 hours!”
by TIM, BURSLEM
Monday, January 26 2009, 6:04PM
“TIME and TIME again this happens. The people who run the A&E dont care, if they did this would not keep happening.”
by Sam, Sot
Monday, January 26 2009, 4:25PM
“NHS is just as bad as any public service, poorly run due to a poor government. It will never change until government changes. Mrs Harrison should not have to have waited that long, it is totally disgusting, especialy at her age, she has seen a lot of time and should be treated with the upmost priority, dignity and respect. The NSRI is always full of tyre kickers and are wasting space and time for the people in need of real treatment. The nurses, doctors and surgeons of the NSRI work their behinds off ALL the time trying to provide a good service, but they (like every other government body) have their hands tied by proceedures and policy. Goodbye Labour, it's time to go!”
by E.B., Stoke
Monday, January 26 2009, 3:54PM
“Our hospital must surely be run by a board of inept fools to let situations like this keep arising week after week.
If i didn't know better i would think the hospital was being run by our Labour councillors, With the help of Ibbs,and Irving of course.What is needed is,someone in charge whose answer to everything is to throw
money at it ,instead of solving the problem.They need an injection of people who have worked in the real world where problems are solved with answers not money.”
by sallyanne, longton
Monday, January 26 2009, 2:42PM
“I can really sympathise with the family of this lady, I recently had to attend the A and E with my elderley aunt. As she was unconcious she was delt with very quickly, but the corridor was full both sides with older people who were getting very confused, it was inbelievable to see. The doctors and nurses were all absolutely fantastic and never stopped, it seemed that its the amount of staff and actual working space that they are short of.
Everytime I go past a so called 'piece of art' in the city it makes me mad.
I am only a layperson and have no financial qualifications or know anything about business, but surely it is more important for people to be treated in hospital than to have a sculpture or art work in the city?”