Northern Ireland Hospital Statistics: Emergency Care (2022/23)

Date published: 29 June 2023

The Department of Health today published annual statistics on activity and waiting times at emergency care departments (ED), in Northern Ireland during the year ending 31st March 2023.

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The statistical bulletin presents information on the total activity at EDs in Northern Ireland during 2022/23, including information on new, unplanned, and planned review attendances, waiting times at EDs, ambulance response times, calls and incidents.

The Northern Ireland Hospital Statistics: Emergency Care (2022/23) publication is the first in the series of three ‘Hospital Statistics’ statistical publications due for release in the coming months, with the further two detailing information on inpatient activity and outpatient activity.

This information release is published on the Departmental website here.

Key Points

Latest Position (2022/23)

•  During 2022/23, 887,936 patients attended urgent and emergency care services, of which 722,950 (new and unplanned reviews) attended an emergency care department (ED), and 137,264 attended PhoneFirst / Urgent Care Centre services without further referral to an ED.

•  During 2022/23, 44.2% of new and unplanned review attendances at Type 1 EDs were treated and discharged, or admitted, within 4 hours of their arrival, compared with 79.1% at Type 2 departments, and 99.4% at Type 3 departments.

•  One in seven (14.3%, 106,990) of the 750,672 new and unplanned review attendances at EDs waited longer than 12 hours to be either treated and discharged home, or admitted.

•  Almost two thirds (64.3%) of patients attending EDs in 2022/23 commenced their treatment within 2 hours of being triaged.

•  The NIAS Category 1 mean (8 minutes) and 90th percentile (15 minutes) targets were not achieved in any month during 2022/23.

•  The NIAS Category 1T mean (19 minutes) target was achieved in each month during 2022/23, whilst the 90th percentile (30 minutes) target was also achieved in each month with the exception of October and December 2022.

Comparison with Previous Year (2021/22 – 2022/23)

•  Since 2021/22, the number of new and unplanned review attendances at EDs increased by 27,722 (3.8%), from 722,950 to 750,672 in 2022/23.

•  Whilst the number of attendances increased slightly between 2021/22 and 2022/23 (27,722), performance against the 4 hour waiting times target decreased from 54.8% to 50.1%.

•  The number of patients spending over 12 hours in an ED increased in 2022/23 (106,990) compared with 2021/22 (78,995).

Five Year Trends (2018/19 – 2022/23)

•  During the last five years, the number of ED attendances (new and unplanned reviews) decreased by 72,175 (8.8%), from 822,847 in 2018/19 to 750,672 in 2022/23.

•  Whilst the number of attendances decreased between 2018/19 and 2022/23, performance against the 4 hour waiting time target declined from 69.9% to 50.1% in 2022/23.

•  Between 2018/19 and 2022/23, the number of patients spending over 12 hours in an ED increased markedly from 25,326 to 106,990, with the Royal Victoria reporting the most notable increase during this period (3,120 to 22,315).

•  Since 2018/19, the proportion of attendances referred by a GP increased from 16.7% to 17.7% in 2022/23.

The information release is published on the Departmental website at:

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/articles/emergency-care-and-ambulance-statistics

Notes to editors: 

1. All information presented in this publication has been provided by HSC Trusts or downloaded by Hospital Information Branch (HIB) within an agreed timescale and validated and quality assured by HIB prior to release. At the end of each financial year HIB verify with HSC Trusts that the information downloaded / submitted during the year is consistent and up to date. Further information can be found in Technical Notes and Appendices 5, 6 & 7 of the Hospital Statistics: Emergency Care publication.

2. Information which presents a summary of the emergency care clinical quality indicators for Northern Ireland has also been included in this release. This information is not National Statistics but is included to provide a more comprehensive and balanced view of the care delivered by EDs and reflects the experience of patients and the timeliness of the care they receive.

3. Readers are advised to be cautious when making direct comparisons between Northern Ireland and other UK Jurisdictions as waiting times may not be measured in a comparable manner. It should also be noted that the way in which emergency care services are delivered differs between UK jurisdictions. This means that the number and types of patients included in the figures may differ between countries. In particular, the 12 hour waiting time information published by England and Northern Ireland is not equivalent and should not be compared. Further information on comparability between Northern Ireland and other UK Jurisdictions is detailed in Appendix 5 of this statistical publication.

4. There are three separate categories of emergency care facility included in this publication:

Type 1 Department A consultant-led service with designated accommodation for the reception of emergency care patients, providing both emergency medicine and emergency surgical services 24 hours a day.

Type 2 Department A consultant-led service with designated accommodation for the reception of emergency care patients, but which does not provide both emergency medicine and emergency surgical services and/or has time-limited opening hours. 4

Type 3 Department A minor injury unit with designated accommodation for the reception of patients with a minor injury and/or illness. It may be doctor or nurse-led. A defining characteristic of this service is that it treats at least minor injuries and/or illnesses and can be routinely accessed without appointment.

5. It should also be noted that from 2014/15 the way in which waiting times information is presented for the Royal Victoria ED changed, with information for the Royal Victoria ED and the Royal Victoria (ENT & Eye Casualty) service being reported separately.

6. The Belfast HSC Trust indicated that the Ear, Nose & Throat (ENT) service at the Royal Victoria Hospital should no longer be reported within the ED waiting times information, as this service is no longer operating as an unscheduled service. As this came into effect from 1st April 2016, where possible we have removed all information for the RVH (ENT) from this publication to aid comparisons with previous years.

7. The Ministerial targets for emergency care waiting times during 2022/23 stated that:

“From April 2022, 95% of patients attending any Type 1, 2 or 3 Emergency Department should be either treated and discharged home, or admitted, within four hours of their arrival in the Department; and no patient attending any Emergency Department should wait longer than 12 hours”.

“By March 2023, at least 80% of patients to have commenced treatment, following triage, within 2 hours.”

8. NIAS implemented a new Clinical Response Model (CRM) on 12th November 2019. Information provided by NIAS from this date is not comparable to the previous CRM.

9. The new call categories and targets are as follows:
 

Call Category

Call Definition

Mean Target

90th Percentile Target

Category 1

999 Immediately life threatening

8 minutes

15 minutes

Category 1 - Transport

999 Immediately life threatening

19 minutes

30 minutes

Category 2

999 Emergency – potentially serious incidents

18 minutes

40 minutes

Category 3

Urgent Problem

120 minutes

Category 4

Less urgent problem

180 minutes

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