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by Nick Lillitos
nlillitos@thekmgroup.co.uk
For the first time this year our hospitals have hit their targets to see the majority of A&E patients in four hours.
It marks the sign of green shoots springing up at A&E departments run by the Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust.
The four-hour target is an indicator set by the government. The target suggests good practice is to see 95% of patients in A&E within four hours of their arrival.
When the new hospital at Pembury opened in September, the trust was meeting its targets. But things started to dip in January – about the same time the KM was reporting how some patients had waited 13 hours at the flagship hospital.
The trust exceeded the target last month, scoring 95.6%, but in all the weeks since January, it was below the 95% mark, sometimes as low aa 87%.
Every month, the trust sees just under 9,000 patients at Maidstone and The Tunbridge Wells Hospitals.
For every percentage point the trust drops below 95% it estimates, on a weekly basis, that would translate to 22 patients waiting longer than four hours.
Full story in today's Kent Messenger.