More needs to be done to minimise 'corridor care'
25 April 2024
We respond to new analysis by the Liberal Democrats on 'corridor care'
Responding to new analysis by the Liberal Democrats on patients waiting in A&E corridors before being admitted to a hospital ward, the chief executive of NHS Providers, Sir Julian Hartley said:
"No one working in the NHS wants to treat patients in corridors.
"Staff work tirelessly, often exhausting every available option, to try and prevent 'corridor care' from happening. They want to provide safe and effective care to patients while respecting their privacy, and treating them with the dignity and compassion they deserve.
"But with record levels of pressure across the whole health and care system, and demand for beds outstripping supply, there will be times when staff are forced to deliver care outside of wards.
"The NHS is keeping more beds open to try and ensure all patients receive care in an appropriate clinical setting but as this data shows, much more needs to be done to minimise incidents of corridor care.
"We also need to boost capacity across social care and community services so people can receive early interventions and preventative care at, or closer to, home."
Related articles
- News
NHS still feeling winter pressures despite welcome fall in seasonal viruses
5 Feb 2026Rory Deighton, acute and community care director, speaking on behalf of NHS Providers and the NHS Confederation, responds to latest NHS England performance figures.
- News
Resident doctors voting for more strikes is 'bitterly disappointing', health leaders say
2 Feb 2026Matthew Taylor, interim chief executive of the NHS Confederation and NHS Providers, responds to news that resident doctors have voted to extend their industrial action.
- News
New CQC report yet more evidence of increasing demand facing mental health services
29 Jan 2026Rebecca Gray, mental health director speaking on behalf of the NHS Confederation and NHS Providers responds to the Care Quality Commission’s (CQC) annual report into the use of the Mental Health Act.
Delivery and performance
Health inequalities
Race equality
Quality