Health officials have launched an investigation after a Rochdale patient reportedly waited eight days for urgent treatment in Bury, a delay so extensive, the NHS considered reclassifying it as “historical interest”.
The incident occurred at Fairfield General Hospital, which has seen a 17% rise in emergency attendances, mostly from Rochdale residents who apparently view their own Urgent Treatment Centre (UTC) as more of a polite suggestion than an actual option. Meanwhile, Rochdale’s own UTC saw just a 1% increase, raising suspicions that patients may think Fairfield comes with better coffee or fewer chances of bumping into their ex.
One patient waited over eight days in Fairfield’s emergency department, or as it’s now known, the Extended Stay Lounge. Sources say the patient was seen eventually, after staff realised the mysterious figure in the waiting room wasn’t a statue but someone who’d simply stopped blinking in protest.
Officials say much of the surge relates to a rise in mental health crises, with some patients turning up more than once a day. One particularly ambitious individual clocked in four visits in a single day, believed to be trying to win a loyalty card scheme no one else knew existed.
In an unexpected twist, two-thirds of these visits resulted in the diagnosis “no abnormality detected” – which, in NHS-speak, means “physically fine, mentally in bits, and wildly allergic to GP phone queues”.
Over £1.1 million has been spent this year alone on 633 patients making eight or more visits, leading to whispers of a new NHS slogan: Urgent Care – now with Clubcard Points.
The committee promises to monitor the issue, although sources close to the meeting admitted “monitor” might mean “write a very firm email and then forget until winter”.
Meanwhile, Rochdale’s UTC continues to be bafflingly underused. Local legend claims it’s guarded by a receptionist who only speaks in riddles and demands a urine sample before you’re allowed through the doors.
