Matthew Osborne

Matthew Osborne

‘Emergency care is broken’: why I did the unthinkable and quit the job I love

Nurse who announced his resignation on Twitter describes the impact of moral injury

Illustration depicts a nurse carrying a huge ball of wire with dark clouds and thunder: nurses face daily pressures and challenges working in emergency departments

Notes from the front line: ‘Most shifts feel like working in a battlefield’

A candid discussion of the unprecedented pressures and challenges across the specialty

Four-hour target

Should I be more concerned about patient care or the four-hour target?

UK emergency departments (EDs) are high-pressure environments focused on delivering care in the most efficient way to patients with a range of health problems. For many people EDs are the front door of the NHS and are a focus of significant media and political interest. People who attend EDs are often anxious and a main element of their concern is waiting time for treatment. In UK EDs the four-hour target is a main NHS target and a cornerstone of evaluating ED performance. There is ongoing debate about whether spending additional time in EDs affects patient care and outcomes, with some research showing increased mortality associated with longer stays and some showing no effect on mortality. Evidence suggests that patients are spending longer in UK EDs and it is possible that those who remain longer than four hours could have worse outcomes. This article identifies the effects of prolonged ED length of stay through a systematic literature review of data published since implementation of the four-hour target to measure the relationship between breaching the target and morbidity and mortality.