Extra staff called in to Royal A&E


Measures are being put in place at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast

Extra staff have been brought in to Belfast’s largest emergency department to deal with the number of people seeking treatment.

The Belfast Health Trust has triggered “escalation plans”, that also include additional beds being opened at the Royal Victoria Hospital (RVH).

More than 100 people are waiting in AE, and about 30 others are on trolleys, the BBC has been told.

The trust said there were no plans to call a major incident at this stage.

However, the trust told the BBC it was monitoring the situation closely.

According to a source, some patients have been waiting at the RVH since about 22:00 GMT on Sunday.

The trust confirmed that in the past 24 hours there had been pressure on all emergency departments across Northern Ireland.

A major incident was declared at the RVH last month, when a large backlog of patients led to lengthy waiting times in its emergency department. At that stage, 42 people were waiting on trolleys.

BBC Northern Ireland’s health correspondent Marie-Louise Connolly said: “The BBC understands that tonight several senior managers are in the department monitoring what is happening.

Unison said it was an exceptionally busy weekend at most of the hospitals

“Considering the negative publicity after January’s incident, it’s understood that staff have been told only to declare another one if there is no other option.”

Ray Rafferty of the union, Unison, said there had been an excessive number of patients and at one point, the department ran out of trolleys.

“The difficulty was the patients that were left over from Sunday,” he said.

“It was an exceptionally busy weekend, at not only the RVH but most hospitals, and it took time to process those patients.

“Unfortunately, some of them were still waiting today whenever the patients that normally arrive on a Monday arrived today, which made the situation untenable.”

Chair of the health committee Sinn Féin’s Maeve McLaughlin said the initiation of an “escalation measure” highlighted the pressure that existed within the system.

She said: “For the past 18 months we have stated that the current situation is symptomatic of the overall downgrading of AEs across our hospitals and the need to address, not just the closure of AE departments, but also where these departments feed to within our hospitals.

“The review that the minister has announced must be fast-tracked. In the interim, he must introduce measures to ensure we do not have a major incident called again in the coming weeks.”

Earlier this month, the Belfast Health Trust admitted that delays in treatment may have been a significant factor in the the deaths of five patients at the RHV in 2013.