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Two-thirds of Barts Covid patients sent in for other ailments

Ross Lydall Health Editor

UP to two-thirds of the Covid patients at one of the country’s biggest NHS trusts during the Omicron wave were admitted for reasons other than the virus, it has emerged.

The revelation from Barts Health gives a new perspective on the hospitalisation data that has been a key factor in determining the Government response to the pandemic. It would also appear to indicate the ongoing success of vaccines in protecting adults against severe illness and death.

Alistair Chesser, group chief medical officer, told the trust’s board: “We thought initially that about one third of the admissions with Omicron were incidental, in other words, Covid was not the primary reason for admission.

“Our figure has changed a bit on that and it’s more like two-thirds now, so a lot of people come with Covid, rather than because of Covid.”

Professor Chesser said the data was provisional and that patients who tested positive still had to be treated under a more stringent infection control protocol, which was more challenging for staff and meant it was much harder to get elderly patients back to care homes.

“The implications of this are that we are looking after people with the usual illnesses, which they come in with particularly in winter, and they have Covid as well, which may or may not be contributing towards the reason for coming into hospital,” he said.

Barts has been at the forefront of the battle against Covid, with one of the floors on the Royal London hospital becoming the capital’s biggest critical care unit during earlier peaks. This month, military assistance was provided to the Royal London, Whipps

58

Percentage of Covid patients in north-west London hospitals who were unvaccinated

Cross and Newham hospitals. Latest figures for London show there were

3,179 Covid patients in hospital yesterday, the lowest figure since December 28. Daily admissions have fallen to 235, the lowest for a month.

Separate figures for hospitals in northwest London show that 58 per cent of Covid patients admitted in the last month were unvaccinated, with the majority in the 65 to 79 age group. Of these, 47 required critical care — of which 72 per cent were not vaccinated.

Barts said that patients testing positive for Covid often managed to overcome the virus — because Omicron is less severe — while still in hospital being treated for other illnesses.

Its hospitals remain “extremely busy” due to winter pressures but trust chiefs are increasingly optimistic the peak of the pandemic has passed. Crucially, the number of Covid patients aged 60 and older has fallen “very significantly” and the number of Covid patients in critical care has remained stable at about 30. Most of the pressure has been on general wards.

Its Covid admissions are only half of what they were a year ago and it has been able to avoid widespread cancellations of non-emergency operations.

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2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

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