Britain’s health service in a ‘humanitarian crisis’ – Red Cross

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PIC.16. FROM LEFT: VICE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN RED CROSS SOCIETY,ANAMBRA STATE BRANCH, DR PETER KATCHY, SECRETARY, MR CHUMA IBEABUCHI, CHAIRMAN, JUSTICE PAUL OBIDIGBO (RTD) AND CHAIRMAN, NNEWI SOUTH LOCAL COUNCIL AREA, DR ERNEST OKOLI, AT THE 2013 WORLD RED CROSS DAY CELEBRATION IN AWKA ON WEDNESDAY (8/5/13).

Britain’s health service is engulfed in a humanitarian crisis that requires the support of the Red Cross to use Land Rovers to transport patients, the charity said on Saturday.

Mike Adamson, chief executive of the British Red Cross, said in a statement in London.

The National Health Service (NHS), founded in 1948, is a source of huge pride for many Britons who are able to access care for free from the cradle to the grave.

“But tight budgets, an ageing population and increasingly complex medical needs have combined in recent years to leave many hospitals struggling during the winter season.

“This has sparked headlines about patients being left to wait on trolleys for hours or even days.

“This means deploying our team of emergency volunteers, and even calling on our partner Land Rover to lend vehicles to transport patients and get the system moving.

“We’ve seen people sent home without clothes, some suffer falls and are not found for days, while others are not washed because there is no carer there to help them,’’ Adamson said.

The NHS has always been an emotive issue in Britain, one of the richest countries in the world and was once described by a former finance minister as the “closest thing the English have to a religion”.

In recent year’s charities and opposition politicians have warned that government cuts to social care have resulted in more elderly and vulnerable patients being treated in hospital rather than at home, putting a huge burden on the service.

Also, the British Red Cross, in a statement on its website next to appeals for help in Yemen and Syria, said it was now “on the front line, responding to the humanitarian crisis in hospitals and ambulance services across the country.

The Red Cross said it was working alongside the health service to support people in their homes to free up beds.

A spokeswoman for NHS England said plans were in place to cope with increased pressure during the winter and that beds were not as full as this time 2016. (Reuters/NAN)

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