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1. Hospital activity and capacity

The data are taken from management information and are subject to change. They have not been not been subject to the same validation processes undertaken for official statistics releases. Please see the Chief Statistician’s blog for more information on reporting management information, data quality and transparency.

Hospital activity and capacity figures include data from acute hospitals from 23 March 2020, field hospitals from 20 April 2020 and community hospitals from 23 April 2020.

Please see the UK Government COVID-19 dashboard for information on healthcare at a UK level. Note the healthcare data presented in the UK dashboard differ from this publication. The UK dashboard includes data for acute hospitals only to enable better comparability with other countries, whereas this publication includes data from acute, community and field hospitals.

Accompanying tables for this release are available, including all the data shown below and also data concerning general and acute beds, 111 and NHS Direct calls, NHS staff absence, and emergency ambulance calls.

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Chart 1 shows daily number of patients admitted to hospital with confirmed or suspected Covid-19 from 23 March 2020 to 4 August 2020. In recent days the number of hospitalisations for Covid-19 has remained broadly stable following a small increase on the 23 July.

Patients admitted to hospital as suspected or confirmed with COVID-19, from 23 March 2020 (MS Excel)

From 29 June 2020, health boards have been asked to exclude patients admitted for elective procedures from COVID-19 related admissions, because including these were inflating the number of suspected cases in hospital at the time of reporting. If patients then received a positive test result whilst in hospital, they would be included in the COVID-19 patient related figures. The health boards have also been asked to not report transfers between hospitals as a separate admission and discharge.

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Chart 2 shows the number of people in hospital confirmed, recovering or suspected with Covid-19 from 23 March 2020 to 4 August 2020. The number of suspected COVID-19 patients has increased slightly in recent days.

Number of people in hospital as suspected, confirmed or recovering with COVID-19, from 23 March 2020 (MS Excel)

Recovering patients are COVID-19 positive patients who had been in hospital for 14+ days with no signs and symptoms, but remain in hospital on a COVID treatment pathway, often for rehabilitation. Health boards were asked to make the change to include these patients from the 26 May 2020. One health board made the change early on 22 May, including the recovering COVID-19 patients in the confirmed category until 25 May. One health board made the change on 8 June.

Please see the Chief Statistician’s blog for more information on reporting on recovering patients.

Between 1 May and 22 May, one health board classified post-14 days COVID-19 patients as non-COVID-19 patients. On 22 May, these patients were re-categorised as COVID-19 patients following the guidance around reporting recovering patients.

From 29 June 2020, health boards have been asked to exclude patients admitted for elective procedures from COVID-19 related admissions, because including these were inflating the number of suspected cases in hospital at the time of reporting. If patients then received a positive test result whilst in hospital, they would be included in the COVID-19 patient related figures. The health boards have also been asked to not report transfers between hospitals as a separate admission and discharge. Two hospitals were previously reporting figures for mental health beds but from 11 July mental health beds are excluded from the data.

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Chart 3 shows the number of invasive beds occupied by use from 23 March 2020 to 4 August 2020. The number of invasive ventilated beds occupied by Covid-19 patients has remained stable throughout July.

Number of invasive ventilated beds by use, from 23 March 2020 (MS Excel)

Baseline relates to the number of beds that were available prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. There are usually 152 critical care beds available. Invasive ventilated beds include beds in and outside a critical care setting, and include surge capacity. COVID-19 patients in this chart include suspected, confirmed, and recovering COVID-19 patients.

From June 2020 hospitals began closing some of the additional surge capacity that was previously put in place for the COVID-19 pandemic.

2. A&E attendances

The data are taken from management information and are subject to change. They have not been not been subject to the same validation processes undertaken for official statistics releases. Please see the Chief Statistician’s blog for more information on reporting management information, data quality and transparency.

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Chart 4 shows the number of A&E attendences falling sharply from mid March to around half the previous number, then climbing slowly from early April, returning to near-normal levels in late July.

Number of daily A&E attendances to major and minor hospitals, from 1 February 2020 (MS Excel)

A&E attendances to major and minor hospitals, from all mode of transports across Wales. Some small minor A&E units are not able to submit daily data, therefore there is probably a small undercount in total attendance.

3. Quality and methodology information

The data are taken from management information and are subject to change. They have not been not been subject to the same validation processes undertaken for official statistics releases. However, they are provided to support transparency and understanding of NHS activity at this time. The official statistics should continue to be considered the authoritative source of data.

Historic data may have been revised and therefore may not be identical to that previously published.

Well-being of Future Generations Act (WFG)

The Well-being of Future Generations Act 2015 is about improving the social, economic, environmental and cultural wellbeing of Wales. The Act puts in place seven wellbeing goals for Wales. These are for a more equal, prosperous, resilient, healthier and globally responsible Wales, with cohesive communities and a vibrant culture and thriving Welsh language. Under section (10)(1) of the Act, the Welsh Ministers must (a) publish indicators (“national indicators”) that must be applied for the purpose of measuring progress towards the achievement of the wellbeing goals, and (b) lay a copy of the national indicators before the National Assembly. The 46 national indicators were laid in March 2016.

Information on the indicators, along with narratives for each of the wellbeing goals and associated technical information is available in the Well-being of Wales report.

Further information on the Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015.

The statistics included in this release could also provide supporting narrative to the national indicators and be used by public services boards in relation to their local well-being assessments and local wellbeing plans.

4. Contact details

Statistician: Rachel Dolman
Telephone: 0300 025 1612
Email: stats.healthinfo@gov.wales

Media: 0300 025 8099

SFR 107/2020