Overnight discharges from NHS hospitals to be examined
- Published
The government is investigating after figures emerged suggesting that hospital patients in England have been discharged overnight to free up beds.
The Times, external newspaper discovered, via Freedom of Information requests, that 100 NHS trusts sent 239,233 patients home last year between 23:00 and 06:00.
NHS medical director Prof Sir Bruce Keogh said people should be sent home only when it was appropriate and safe.
The paper had contacted 170 NHS trusts in England but only 100 responded.
However, the rates of those discharged varied widely between different hospitals.
No warning
The paper reported that some 3.5% of all hospital discharges took place between those hours and this rate had steadily held for the past five years.
If the remaining 70 trusts discharged their patients at similar rates, this would add up to 400,000 such discharges a year and almost 8,000 a week, the paper added.
Derby Hospitals Foundation Trust sent 8.7% of its patients home overnight but the trust told the Times there may have been a problem with its records.
Others with rates above 7% include the Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust in Birmingham and Countess of Chester and University Hospitals of Leicester trusts.
Newcastle Hospitals Foundation Trust and Southend University Hospital Foundation Trust both said they did not discharge patients during the night.
Variable data
One trust, which did not want to be identified, told the BBC that some of its patients had been in assessment units for further checks after being brought in as emergencies - and they were allowed home because they hadn't been formally admitted as inpatients.
The Times does state that the data is variable and while some hospitals admitted to keeping detailed records, others said they could not guarantee the accuracy of the figures as details were not necessarily recorded accurately.
The paper also adds that some hospitals categorise deaths as "discharges" while others do not.
Sir Bruce said: "I am concerned to hear that some patients may be being discharged unnecessarily late.
"Patients should only be discharged when it's clinically appropriate, safe and convenient for them and their families.
"It is simply not fair to be sending people home late at night. We will look at this."
Dr Mark Porter, of the British Medical Association, said the figures illustrated the "enormous pressure" the health service was under.
The Patients Association reported that it had received regular calls from people who had been sent home from hospital without any warning late at night.
The organisation's chief executive Katherine Murphy said the situation was unacceptable, the Times reported.
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