Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Record
Daily Record
World
Helena Vesty & Lewis Moynihan

Woman 'left overnight in corridor' amid '48 hours from hell in A&E'

A woman says she has been left traumatised after suffering '48 hours from hell in A&E'. Tracey Elliott, 55, claims during her horror hospital experience she was left overnight in a corridor and made to wait for hours before receiving any treatment.

The 55-year-old spent two days in two Greater Manchester’s hospitals and was left far from impressed by her treatment. She attended A&E with an urgent letter from her doctor suspecting her of having cauda equina syndrome, reports Manchester Evening News.

The syndrome is a rare and severe type of spinal narrowing where all of the nerves in the lower back suddenly become severely compressed. It may require emergency surgery, because the longer it goes untreated, the greater the chance it will lead to permanent paralysis and incontinence, according to the NHS.

Tracey’s diary of events, reads: “My ordeal began on November 29, having been referred immediately to A&E with suspected cauda equina, a medical emergency. 1.50pm: I arrived at Wythenshawe Hospital and, having been booked in, was told to take a seat.

“9.30pm: Still seated in triage, I couldn't suffer the pain anymore and waited again in the line at reception. I almost passed out, fortunately there was a chair handy and the receptionist noticed.

Tracey says she was left in corridors multiple times (Tracey Elliott)

"I had not been offered painkillers, food or drink during those seven hours. Seven hours, 40 minutes in A&E [so far].

“9.40pm: I was moved to a cubicle in A&E and could lie on a trolley. I saw a doctor who said I'd go for an MRI.

“11.26pm: I was still on a trolley in A&E, having been told I would be moved to a ward. I could hear a lady shouting help every two seconds for hours on end, so sleep was not an option.

“Eight hours, 46 minutes in A&E.” The next morning, the patient alleges that she was still waiting for treatment and was growing hungry.

So much so, that Tracey claims that she clubbed in with other patients for a loaf of bread which a nurse went out to buy for the ward. Her diary continued: "November 30, Wythenshawe Hospital A&E.

“5.30am: I spent the night on the trolley in A&E, sandwiched between the screaming woman and an excruciatingly loud machine. At some point I had been given a paracetamol IV and when it didn't work, codeine, this didn't work either so about 5.30am I received oral morphine.

"No MRI had materialised. 10.23am: I still hadn't had any sustenance, despite asking the nurse repeatedly for some food and a drink and eventually received toast and a coffee.

“2.30pm: I was moved to a corridor with 3 other people. I had not received a MRI, food, drink nor treatment, I had been in A&E for hours.

"We were all hungry and hadn't received food so we asked for toast, only to be told there was no bread, we all contributed so the nurse could buy a loaf and we could eat. One patient only had a chair so I shared my blankets and trolley.”

After some 27 hours in A&E, Tracey claims that she was still in the corridor but was then finally taken for her MRI scan. However, for medical reasons, she needed the procedure done at Salford Royal.

This lead to the patient to begin waiting for an ambulance transfer just after 6pm. At around 9.30pm, she claims she made it to Salford Royal and is now on a trolley in a corridor.

The diary continues: “December 1, 2022, Salford Royal A&E. 3.33am: I have squatted in an empty room overnight, still on my trolley. The patient I was sharing the corridor with was shouting obscenities and racially abusing his carer.

“I've had the MRI and had my shunt reset. Apparently there is a piece of loose disk somewhere inoperable but I need to wait to see the doctor.

"Now I've been told I need to return to Wythenshawe. I haven't brushed my teeth in three days, haven't been offered food or drink.

A busy A&E with an approximate waiting time of nine hours, according to the sign on the wall (Tracey Elliott)

“I've been told my regular medications, when I requested them again tonight, are my responsibility to provide. How I was supposed to predict this length of stay in various corridors is a mystery.”

The diaries continues and at 8am, the patient claims a nurse brought her prescription medications 'plus my first pillow, toothbrush, toothpaste, a towel and soap'.

Tracey wrote: "It was very heartening to have received a little compassion. For the first time I have been given a call the nurse button".

But by 9am, she was “back in a corridor, my room was needed.” Tracey claims she was then sent back to Wythenshawe’s A&E from Salford that morning, after 40 hours in the system.

She added: “4.20pm: Still in Wythenshawe A&E triage, an orthopaedic doctor has spoken to me in A&E to say it's not cauda equina. When I asked what it was and what they could do, I was told their only job was to diagnose cauda equina.”

After a staggering 48 hours and 56 minutes in A&E, Tracey says she finally got a taxi back home. She said “In conclusion, apart from knowing I do not have cauda equina, my stay in A&E has been detrimental to my physical health.

“I was left to suddenly withdraw from my medications, not given food, liquids or adequate pain relief, nor a room or a bed to sleep in, and forced to sit upright for hours in a hard chair which has made my pain worse. My mental health has been impacted the most, I can't sleep, I'm nervous, bursting into tears, and obsessively reliving the trauma, the lack of empathy I was subject to, how my needs both physical and medical were ignored.

"I'm suffering anxiety attacks and I'm frightened and deeply concerned about what will potentially happen should I need emergency treatment again or even worse, as I get older. I am sure if I was older or frail I would not have survived the ordeal.”

A Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust spokesperson, which runs Wythenshawe, said: “We have exceptionally high demand for our emergency services. Our staff are working incredibly hard, but patients may wait longer in some cases than we would want.

"Patients are always seen in order of clinical priority, and they may be delayed if more urgent cases arrive. Ms Elliott has submitted a formal complaint and we will be taking that process forwards.”

Simon Featherstone, Director of Nursing, Salford Care Organisation added: “Our Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) has been working with the PALS service from Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust to support with any information about Ms Elliott’s care. We will also continue to liaise directly with Ms Elliott on any aspects of her care at Salford Royal Care Organisation that she is concerned about or wants further information on.”

Don't miss the latest news from around Scotland and beyond - Sign up to our daily newsletter here .

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.