RCEM report documents A&E experiences of people aged 75+ 

The Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) has published a report entitled ‘Care of Older People 2023-24’.  

This report is part of the College’s Clinical Quality Improvement Programme which is in its second of three years. Using data from 24,865 patient experiences from 4 October 2023 to 3 October 2024 it shows 12+ hour waits in A&E departments across the UK for people aged 75+.  

The report also documents: 

  • Only 16% of patients were screened for delirium, a reversible condition which can be associated with mortality, characterised by a sudden change in mental function. 
  • On average less than half (48%) of patients had screening to assess the risk of falling. 
  • An average of only 56% of patients underwent screening for general frailty, which if detected early can trigger more timely intervention and support in hospital and in the community. 

Dr Adrian Boyle, President of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, says: 

“The healthcare system is failing our most vulnerable patients – more than a million last year. These people are our parents, grandparents, great-grandparents. They aren’t receiving the level of care they need, as they endure the longest stays in our EDs, often suffering degrading and dehumanising ‘corridor care’.  

It’s an alarming threat to patient safety. We know long stays are dangerous, especially for those who are elderly, and put’s people’s lives at risk. As our QIP highlights, more needs to be done to improve their care – vital tests need to get underway as soon as they arrive to inform the care they need and mitigate the risk of another visit to the ED.” 

You can read the report here: https://rcem.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/RCEM-2023-24-Care-of-Older-People-QIP-National-Report.pdf 

Find out more about the RCEM Quality Improvement Programme here: https://rcem.ac.uk/quality-improvement-2/ 

Similar Posts

  • Diagnosis pilot schemes

    Fourteen pilot schemes across England are attempting to increase diagnosis rates by checking care home residents to see whether they have dementia. Under the NHS’s £900,000 drive to revive the flagging dementia diagnosis rate, GPs will share lists of care home residents with specialist teams who will go into care homes. Nurses and other clinicians…

  • Value of music

    Charity Music for Dementia has launched a campaign video to highlight the value of music in dementia care.  In the video campaign director Grace Meadows aims to promote awareness of the power of music and encourage more people to join Music for Dementia’s campaign.  Readers are invited by the charity to take a minute to…

  • Keep a steady weight

    Weight and dementia has been in the news recently. One study published in Jama Network Open and based at McMaster University in Canada, showed that excess body fat appeared to affect not only cardiovascular risk factors but also cognitive performance. Another, published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association, suggested that although all 16,000 participants…

  • In Wonderland

    Winchester care home St Catherine’s View celebrated its 10th anniversary with a “Hatter’s tea party” and a wardrobe of fancy dress costumes.  Among guests at the Alice in Wonderland-themed party was “Alice” herself, clinical lead Hayley Geddes, who is pictured with resident Christina Millest. “Our Hatter’s tea party was a lovely opportunity to celebrate and we…