NHS Crisis Deepens as 1 in 7 Beds Blocked and Excess Non-Covid Deaths Hit Nearly 22,500

Nearly one hundred NHS trusts are dealing with fewer Covid patients than so-called ‘bed-blockers’ who are fit to discharge but unable to leave, MailOnline analysis shows.

More than 13,300 hospital beds across the country – or one in seven – were filled with patients declared fit for discharge each day last month, on average. The figure is triple the pre-pandemic average.

For comparison, more than 8,000 patients with coronavirus were being treated in hospital beds on any given day  in the last week of September. This tally also overestimates the scale of Covid’s resurgence, given only a third of so-called virus patients are ill because of the infection itself.

In total, some 96 of England’s 121 trusts – 79% – had more bed-blockers in wards than Covid patients, our audit found.

MPs and charities called the statistics laying bare the scale of the country’s bed-blocking jam “worrying”, with the the “busiest time of year for the NHS” just around the corner.

Damning MailOnline analysis last month also revealed up to a third of beds at some trusts, in parts of Bristol, the Midlands and Lancashire, are occupied by patients who do not need to be there.

Experts say the numbers are being driven by a separate crisis in social care, leaving patients left to languish on wards for up to nine months because there is no suitable nursing accommodation or care available for them in the community. Care bosses say a lack of staffing is the biggest issue.

Former Health and Social Care Secretary Therese Coffey vowed to end the scandal, which has soared to record levels and is thought to cost taxpayers roughly £2billion-a-year. Bed-blockers contribute to ambulance delays by preventing patients being passed through A&E while also hampering efforts to tackle the backlog.

She pledged £500million in funding aimed to speed up discharges by using the war chest to attract staff — but charities claimed the funds have yet to be dished out, adding they look ‘too little, too late’ and should be doubled in the coming Autumn Budget.

“Lack of staffing” in care homes “is the biggest issue” – maybe shouldn’t have sacked thousands of them then for being unvaccinated, and made many workers who stayed feel unwanted and abused. Who wants to work in a sector that – already notorious for paying little for challenging work – also makes it an occupational requirement to participate in unwanted, experimental medical treatment?

It comes as the excess death crisis continues, with 1,714 excess deaths in England and Wales registered in the week ending October 21st, according to the ONS, which is 16.8% above the five year average. Of those, 1,245 were attributed to an underlying cause other than COVID-19. This brings the total excess non-Covid deaths since the wave began in April to 22,483.

The autumn booster campaign, like the spring booster campaign, has coincided with a rise in excess non-Covid deaths that may be indicative of vaccine injury or may be due to another as yet unidentified cause.

Stop Press: Oxford’s Professor Carl Heneghan and Dr. Tom Jefferson have repeated their call for a proper investigation into what’s behind the excess deaths this year:

We urgently need a government investigative task force that looks into these deaths. What’s driving them, and what can be done to prevent them? We recommend that the task force comprises two pathologists and coroners, one clinical epidemiologist, a medical statistician, and at least three clinicians, along with a secretariat to keep it going. Most importantly, it is separated from the usual government functions that want to brush any excess events under the carpet.

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MikeAustin
3 years ago

My analysis of today’s weekly deaths is 20.7% above average, 17% above maximum for 2010-2019 (corrected for population total).
This is how it looks since the beginning of the hoax.

ONS-WeeklyDeathTotals-221101c.jpg
Mark S
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

Well done for that. The averages they use to compare the figures are not remotely typical. It makes much more sense to use the averages before prior to 2020.

Freecumbria
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

Good analysis.

This is my chart from the same data (adjusted for population size in each year).

Hard to see clearly from the jumble of lines but you can see all cause mortality (the blue line) is currently very high.

From the cumulative chart on the right again all cause mortality seems to have increased following the boosters

Regstd-all-ages-per-capita.jpg
Freecumbria
3 years ago
Reply to  Freecumbria

And this time based on the occurrence data (not adjusted for population this time) we see the high all cause mortality vs the 2015-2019 5 year average, currently being experienced since the boosters

Occ-vs-2015-to-2019.jpg
Freecumbria
3 years ago
Reply to  Freecumbria

And all cause mortality in the 15-19 age group (unadjusted for population) around or below the 2015-2019 average until experimental vaccination began in this age group in 2021 and has been well above the 2015-2019 average since then and continuing into 2022

15-19-1st-Nov-2022.jpg
NickR
3 years ago
Reply to  Freecumbria

and it’s not just the UK. Euromomo data shows excess in 2022 significantly higher than 2020 & 2021.

Screenshot_20221101-175853_Chrome.jpg
MikeAustin
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

I think every man and his dog chart these figures now. I started in March 2020 and was confused as to what was going on. It made no sense. It was not until July 2020 that I found lockdownsceptics and others doing the same sort of analyses.
I now update the weekly deaths and vax adverse reactions for UK, Europe and USA on my Telegram group t.me/mikes_stuff.

NeilParkin
3 years ago

Good job we didn’t needlessly fire thousands of care workers.

Oh…

JXB
JXB
3 years ago

What happened to geriatric hospitals, many of which were former isolation/fever/TB hospitals where elderly patients were treated and cared for leaving the general hospital bed-stock free?

Answer: closed to save money.

A State-run entity has no access to private capital for investment. Any ‘investment’ comes from taxes and all the State entities are in competition for the same pot of money. Who gets what is largely a political decision, based on which is better at grabbing media attention for its need for more funding.

The NHS is a cost centre which means it generates no revenue to cover cost incurred in producing output, and no ‘surplus’ to reinvest to expand operations. Whereas private businesses can reduce costs by more efficient use of resources without reducing output, the only way the NHS can reduce costs is by reducing output.

This is very simple economics and maths. Until people realise this, they will continue with the notion that the NHS will magically improve if only more money were thrown at it.

What is needed is a medical service in a competitive private market for provision and insurance. The State is incompetent at everything.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago

‘“Lack of staffing” in care homes “is the biggest issue” – maybe shouldn’t have sacked a load of them then for being unvaccinated, and made many workers who stayed feel unwanted and abused. ‘

And putting up minimum wage which increased payroll expense in many care homes making them unprofitable, or if NHS run, without enough budget for staffing.

The problem is always Government.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

To be fair, it isn’t just government. As a society we don’t face up to our responsibilities in looking after old people. Yep, the government has made things worse (especially with the unforgivable care-home staff stab mandate), but government has tended to reflect society’s attitude to old people.

Paramaniac
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

I work as a Paramedic. If we go out to an elderly person who has, say, fallen out of bed, we do all the checks on them and if everything seems ok, we…….. take them into hospital!
Why? because I want to keep my job.
We live in a toxic blame culture and were I to leave that person at home and they died, even days after the event and of natural causes, I would be blamed. Forget reason, common sense and justice, I would be put in front of a medical kangaroo court and be lucky to get out with a P45 and not prison.
Don’t think though that the fear stops there, when we’ve dumped them at hospital (and breathed a sigh of relief) the doctors and nurses at A&E do every test under the sun to cover their a***es and usually end up sending them to the wards “just in case”.
It’s simply paralysing fear on the part of clinicians that is filling the wards with the elderly, that have no medical reason to be there.

RTSC
RTSC
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Do you really think a Care Worker should receive less than the current minimum wage for what is a really hard job …. far harder than, for instance, working in a shop?

Mogwai
3 years ago

The NHS are gonna be in deep doo-doo this winter aren’t they, if they’re already struggling? They’re in for a tsunami of vaxxed who have screwed up their immune systems, and are thereby more prone to getting ill from every passing pathogen which wouldn’t normally have been an issue, then there’s all the horrid effects as a direct result of their jabbed status. What’s the solution? Well roll up and get your next shot of demonstrably “safe and effective” gene therapy obviously. Be like the inspirational woman Walensky, and don’t let the fact you’re 5X jabbed to the hilt put you off getting any more! Throw in some uber efficacious Paxlovid for good measure while you’re at it. Jeez, how many more will it take to just exterminate these wicked sh*t-munchers once and for all?? It’s never the ones who actually deserve to be killed or permanently disabled from the shots they so zealously promote copping it is it? Is this game rigged as well? People have died or been terribly injured after one or two shots but she’s still going after five! 😮

https://www.wndnewscenter.org/5x-vaccinated-cdc-chief-gets-covid-again-after-paxlovid-treatment/

MikeAustin
3 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

We have to offer something for these poor souls.
The best way is to encourage them to recognise what the cause of their illnesses is and to take responsibility for their own health.
There is plenty of support here – notably, the World Council of Health who provide useful guides for treatment, detoxing and so on.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

We have to offer something for these poor souls.

Indeed, but what? We have very little understanding of the mechanisms of the stab damage. And no one in governments or the pharma industry has any interest in finding out.

How can the damage be mitigated or treated until it is understood?

PS: were I stabbed (I’m not) I’d try to catch every cold going in an attempt to reset my immune system. If this became widespread practice it could be known as ‘The Great Reset’.

MikeAustin
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

This is where real medical treatment comes in. During the early days of the ‘pandemic’ wonderful doctors like Dr Peter McCullough used their experience and resourcefulness to repurpose medications according to symptoms. Hydroxychloroquine and Ivermectin were front runners that are very effective.
The major part of the toxicity of the ‘virus’ was the spike protein. And mRNA jabs cause the body to produce this. Therfore, much of the Covid – and long covid – treatment equally applies to jabs.
Then there is the rebuilding of the immune system after it has been compromised by the jab. Detoxing may help here. I don’t know as I have no experience in this area.
Of course, they are some extreme side effects of the jabs, such as the long white rubbery clots that are not normal. It may take some time to tackle those. And the myopericarditis damage is not reversible.
The point is that we have somewhere to start, so we should get cracking!

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

Isn’t he spike just a part of the problem? Aren’t the presence PEGs and lipid nanoparticles also serious? And potentially having trained the immune system to recognise the body’s own cells as alien, and thus precipitating auto-immune diseases? And aren’t auto-immune diseases devilishly difficult to deal with?

I don’t know of course, and I have no medical training. But I do have a very strong feeling that undoing these jabs will be extremely difficult, if not impossible. And it seems very clear to me that unless ‘science’ starts addressing this no answers or progress will be forthcoming.

For all the justifiable concern about immune imprinting, my guess is that given enough time and practice the human immune system may indeed be able to reset itself, if only by increments.

MikeAustin
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Yes, indeed. The problems come from various jab contents and manifest in different ways and to different degrees in different people. But, it seems, not all jabs are the same – maybe due to poor quality controls or maybe due to design.
But we have to start doing what we can right now. We know that some success is possible. We must not wait for a full scientific study (perhaps with peer-review) before we even begin. That was Dr Andrew Hill’s pharma-sponsored approach to Ivermectin. It stopped cheap, effective and safe treatment that was based on evidence. His doctored report paved the way for emergency experimental jabs by kicking a proven treatment (ivermectin) like a can down the road.
People need encouragement to take responsibility for their health rather than lining up to take something that is unknown to them or the people administering it. Meanwhile, the science rolls on due to the efforts of good-hearted, capable and unsponsored scientists who are investigating the issues in more detail.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

good-hearted, capable and unsponsored scientists 

Indeed, that’s where it starts, and hopefully gathers pace. For it to be mainstream implies the pharma industry has admitted some form of guilt. In time, I think it will be forced on them.

amanuensis
3 years ago

You’d think they’d have learnt by now that simply throwing cash at the NHS makes the cash disappear without any benefit.

The NHS actually required some significant reform, but that’s unlikely to happen any time soon (too many people have a quasi-religious belief in the NHS).

As it stands, even with the money throwing, the problem will only get worse this winter. If we’re lucky it’ll improve a bit in the spring.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  amanuensis

I am inclined to believe TPTB are actually quite satisfied with a collapsing health system as it serves the depopulation agenda admirably.

Myra
3 years ago

I would like to add a ‘common sense’ person to the taskforce..

Michael Staples
Michael Staples
3 years ago

Wasn’t there a plan to use hotels as recuperation/convalescent centres with light monitoring of patients, in order to free up hospital beds? Perhaps there are too many illegal migrants in the hotels to allow this.

RTSC
RTSC
3 years ago

5 decades of Government policies, which have increasingly made it impossible for families to care for their own elderly relatives, have led to this situation. It has just been massively exacerbated by the Covid lunacy, including deliberately sacking 40,000 experienced Care Workers for refusing to participate in a drug testing experiment.

Care Workers have to be very mentally strong to do the job they do. Did the pathetic morons in Government REALLY think they could all be bullied into submitting to their medical experiment?

One of many lessons people should take from the events of the past 3 years is LOOK AFTER YOUR OWN HEALTH. Another is DON’T RELY ON THE GOVERNMENT TO HELP YOU – DO IT YOURSELF.

The only people the NHS is properly serving are the tens of thousands of criminal migrants, who get face-to-face access to a GP twice a week.