Hospital IT failure causing serious delays to patient care in Greater Manchester

Royal Oldham, Fairfield General, North Manchester General and Rochdale Infirmary are all affected

Author: Nathan MarshPublished 24th May 2022

NHS Bosses in Greater Manchester are urging people not to turn up to A&E unless their condition is life threatening.

Staff are battling severe delays in patient care due to a major IT failure.

Fairfield General, North Manchester General and Rochdale Infirmary are affected, but it's understood Royal Oldham is the worst affected.

The Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust has released a statement:

Since Wednesday (18 May 2022), the Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust has been experiencing disruption and instability issues in some of its digital IT clinical systems.

The Trust’s Digital IT team continues to investigate the issues with the relevant technology providers to resolve this.

Dr Chris Brookes, Deputy CEO and Chief Medical Officer for the Northern Care Alliance NHS Trust said:

“We are still working hard to resolve the significant IT issues that have been affecting some of our digital systems at our hospitals at Oldham, Bury and Rochdale, as well as North Manchester General Hospital which is run by Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust. Salford Royal is unaffected.

“This means that our clinical teams are continuing to rely on our robust contingency plans for such critical incidents.

“Patient safety and maintaining essential services remains our priority. We are doing everything we can to fix the IT issues and to limit disruption to patients and our services. However, unfortunately some patients may experience some delays and additional waiting across some of our services such as outpatient appointments, diagnostic tests or scans. We apologise for this.

“All patient records and personal data held by the NHS and Trust remains secure and unaffected.

“Patients who have a hospital appointment whether for planned surgery or as an outpatient should continue to attend unless they are contacted directly by the Trust and told otherwise.

“Our Emergency Departments are particularly busy at the moment. For those who feel they need to attend our emergency departments, they are likely to be waiting longer than normal if they have minor ailments. We are asking the public to think carefully before attending. We would, as always, recommend that you contact NHS 111 or seek advice from your local pharmacy or GP.”

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