Staff at a hospital in the NHS are raising concerns about the prioritization of British passengers from a cruise ship affected by hantavirus over the overwhelming workload in their A&E department.
Arrowe Park Hospital in the Wirral, Merseyside is currently isolating British nationals from the MV Hondius cruise ship, which had an outbreak of hantavirus, a rat-borne illness. Hospital management disputes the claims made by the staff.
Following the evacuation of all passengers from the cruise ship, 31 individuals were transferred to Manchester Airport via charter flights and then brought to the Frontis building for quarantine. Despite none of them showing symptoms or testing positive for hantavirus, several passengers have already left the hospital after testing negative. They will now undergo a voluntary 45-day isolation period at home or suitable accommodation.
Hospital staff are feeling overwhelmed as resources are being directed towards the quarantine patients, exacerbating the strain on the already busy A&E department. Despite reported improvements in A&E performance, staff members are expressing frustration over the allocation of resources and the sudden relocation of some staff to accommodate the isolation needs of hantavirus patients.
The hospital management emphasizes that all services are running normally and there has been no prioritization, as the hantavirus isolation project is part of a nationally-led response. They assure that daily reviews and safety checks are conducted, and ambulance handover times have remained efficient.
In response to the concerns raised by staff, the hospital encourages open communication through established channels and expresses gratitude for the support received during this challenging time.
