Ambulance waits of 40 hours as NHS delays worsen

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Ambulance waits of 40 hours as NHS delays worsen
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Forty-hour ambulance waits as NHS delays worsen

More than 10,000 ambulances a week are caught in queues of at least an hour outside accident-and-emergency units in England, a BBC News analysis shows.

When finally admitted, to the Royal Cornwall Hospital, which has apologised for her care, she had surgery.Both ambulance response times and A&E waits have hit their worst levels on record in all parts of the UK in recent months. Alongside Cornwall, parts of Gloucestershire, Lincolnshire, Somerset and Bristol have the longest waits, Freedom of Information requests by the Liberal Democrats have revealed.This is meant to happen within 15 minutes of arrival - but, as the BBC News analysis shows, regularly takes longer.

Government and local health chiefs' attempts to tackle the problems were "not really making a dent" in the delays, she said, and the system was facing gridlock. Having fallen at home, in August, she had been left in "excruciating pain" lying on the floor overnight, her daughter said. Unions have cited the problems facing the emergency-care system as one of the factors motivating members to strike.

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