New CQC report also finds growing number of patients think there are too few nurses to care for them
Two in five people admitted to hospital for planned care in England last year had their health worsen while they were on the NHS waiting list, a major survey reveals.
The finding emerged in a new report by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) that also found that growing numbers of patients think there are too few nurses on duty to care for them.
39% of patients would like to have been admitted sooner.
Almost one in five (18%) felt they waited “far too long” to get a bed once they had been admitted – a big rise on the 8% who said that in 2020.
Only 52% thought there were always enough nurses on duty.
Discharge was often unsatisfactory for patients, with only 48% given enough notice about when they would leave and only 45% told how their post-hospital care would happen.
Hospital care was less good than before Covid struck in 2020, patients said.
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