Hospital patients left to die alone as NHS nurses caring for 'dozens at a time', report finds

A blurred picture of hospital staff walking through a ward with blue curtains covering bays
-Credit: (Image: PA Archive/PA Images)


Hospital patients in England are being left to die alone due to staff shortages, according to a new report by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN). The RCN said its research suggested that only a third of shifts had enough registered nurses on duty.

NHS nurses are often caring for dozens of patients at a time, said the RCN, as it called for safety-critical limits on the maximum number of patients a single nurse can be responsible for. A survey of more than 11,000 nursing staff found many were demoralised from being unable to keep patients safe, the RCN said.

Only a third of hospital nursing staff said their shift had the planned number of registered nurses on it. Significant numbers in accident and emergency and outpatient departments reported having more than 51 patients to care for.

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An elderly person's hands while they are sitting in bed in a care home
Nurses said that standards of care in UK hospitals are so low, the benchmark is just 'survival' -Credit:JGI/Tom Grill

A nurse working in the community in the south-west of England, said: "We have days when we have 60 visits unallocated because we don't have enough staff. Every day we are asked to do more. We are always rushing." Another, also working in the community in the south of England, said: "We leave over 50 patients requiring nursing care unseen on a daily basis due to poor staffing levels. This leads to increases in hospital admissions and death. It is left to us to decide who gets seen and who gets missed, which is heartbreaking."

In a hospital in the West Midlands one nurse said: "I have not been able to sit with patients who are dying, meaning they have been left to die alone. I have not had the time to make sure patients are fed properly and have adequate drinks."

A midwife, working in a hospital in Yorkshire, said: "Completely unsafe care due to unacceptable staffing levels. The standards of what is acceptable care for a service to provide have fallen so low, the benchmark is survival."

RCN acting general secretary Professor Nicola Ranger said: "In every health and care setting, nursing staff are fighting a losing battle to keep patients safe. Without safety-critical limits on the maximum number of patients they can care for, nurses are being made responsible for dozens at a time, often with complex needs."

She continued: "It is dangerous to patients and demoralising for nursing staff. When patients cannot access safe care in the community, conditions worsen and they end up in hospital where workforce shortages are just as severe. This vicious cycle fails staff and patients it cannot go on."

She stressed the need for investment in the sector: "We desperately need urgent investment in the nursing workforce but also to see safety-critical nurse-patient ratios enshrined in law. That is how we improve care and stop patients coming to harm."

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