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NHS A&E Overhaul: Tackling Corridor Care Crisis
10 Feb
Summary
- New A&E areas will manage patients needing extended care.
- Changes aim to improve patient experience and reduce deaths.
- RCEM states lack of beds and social care remain core issues.

Emergency departments across England are implementing a new operational model to address the critical "corridor care crisis." This initiative introduces dedicated areas within A&Es for patients anticipated to require "extended" care, typically between four to eight hours. The goal is to prioritize those with the most urgent needs and prevent overcrowding, making prolonged waits more bearable, especially for the elderly.
Upon arrival, patients will be triaged, and some may be redirected to alternative same-day clinics for quicker treatment. Senior clinicians will be positioned at the front door to ensure patients receive appropriate care in the right setting, allowing A&E to focus on life-saving interventions. Data indicates that spending over 12 hours in A&E more than doubles the risk of death within 30 days.
The Royal College of Emergency Medicine, however, points out that this plan addresses only one aspect of a complex issue. They emphasize that the core problems are a shortage of hospital beds and insufficient social care support, which hinder patient discharge and lead to overall hospital occupancy.
This guidance forms part of a broader strategy to help hospitals achieve the national target of admitting, transferring, or discharging 95% of A&E patients within four hours, a benchmark unmet for nearly a decade. Current figures show 73.8% of patients were seen within this timeframe last month, with an interim target of 78% set for March 2026.




