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A&E alerts across Greater Manchester could be a result of 'massive pressure' to meet NHS targets, insiders say

The alerts come as pressure ramps up on hospitals across the country to hit the target of admitting, transferring or discharging people within four hours of their arrival

Doctors on the ground say this is ‘no more busy than usual’, however the 'usual' has already been slammed as 'unsafe' by some Greater Manchester sources this winter(Image: Getty Images)

Multiple alerts have been issued by Greater Manchester’s hospitals in recent days, warning of long delays across eight of the region’s A&E departments. But the flurry of alerts could be a result of the NHS striving to meet performance targets for March, fear senior health sources on the ground.

This week, patients have been warned to expect long delays in hospitals across Greater Manchester. Four of the region's NHS trusts, which run eight A&E departments in total, issued alerts to the public online on Tuesday (March 12).

However, the alerts come as pressure ramps up on hospitals across the country to hit the target of admitting, transferring or discharging people within four hours of their arrival at A&E in 76 per cent of cases in March. The alerts came in time with NHS finance chiefs offering millions of pounds to trusts operating hospitals to deliver better performance against that four-hour target.

This winter has seen much higher demand than in previous years, but instead of a major spike in demand in recent days, the pressure has been consistently high as previous weeks and months, say sources in hospitals across Greater Manchester.

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Patients inside the affected A&Es have told the Manchester Evening News that they have been waiting hours at the start of the week, with patients being treated on corridors as emergency departments have been crammed. One Greater Manchester consultant told the M.E.N. how there have been patients waiting more than 12 hours to be seen in A&E, with waits for beds lasting more than a day.

But doctors on the ground say this is ‘no more busy than usual’, although the 'usual' has already been slammed as 'unsafe' by some Greater Manchester sources this winter. The Manchester Evening News. has reported on huge waits in A&Es across Greater Manchester throughout this winter which has been worse than recent years, according to other senior NHS sources.

Meanwhile, sources say there is ‘massive political pressure’ to meet the 76 per cent four-hour target – which one senior doctor called ‘unachievable’. The target was announced last January, but has been routinely missed, including in Greater Manchester.