Thousands of people with sickle cell disease will benefit from quicker pain relief when experiencing a crisis thanks to new specialist NHS centres across the country.
On World Sickle Cell Day on June 19th, NHS England announced the creation of new expert clinics to provide specialist care when people need it most, allowing them to bypass A&E.
Around 15,000 people in England have sickle cell disease. The condition can cause patients multiple periods of intense pain a year – known as a crisis – due to blood clotting in their arteries.
The new 24/7 Hyper Acute Units will be set up in parts of the country with the highest number of sickle patients, initially London and Manchester, later this year.
Around four in five people with sickle cell disease will receive specialist support from staff at the units, meaning they can avoid waiting in A&E, going straight to clinicians who understand their condition and can provide effective pain relief quicker.
The new units are part of a raft of measures taken over the last year, including training for healthcare professionals on sickle cell symptoms, to address longstanding inequalities reported by patients in accessing the right care.
Last month, NHS England and NHS Blood and Transplant also announced a new partnership to provide genetic tests for patients with sickle cell and related conditions, enabling them to receive better-matched blood transfusions – decreasing the risk of side-effects.
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Campaign
Other new steps being taken today include a campaign to ensure those eligible for free prescriptions take up the offer to help them stay well at home, and steps towards a new digital care plan to ensure patients get the right care wherever they are.
NHS chief executive Amanda Pritchard said: “Sickle cell crises can be deeply debilitating, and patients have the right to expect that the NHS will be there for them when they need help most. By creating these new specialist units we hope to be able to provide a much better experience, with much quicker treatment, for thousands of people.
“The new measures we are launching today are the latest, important step we are taking to improve how the NHS meets the needs of sickle cell patients, listening closely to what they have told us would make the biggest difference, and we are committed to continuing this work together.”
The NHS recently launched a campaign to ensure staff at A&Es are aware of the symptoms of a sickle cell crisis, which include severe pain, fever, one-sided paralysis, difficulty walking, sudden vision changes and confusion.
Professor Bola Owolabi, NHS director for health inequalities, said: “These new hyperacute units will give people with sickle cell the confidence to come forward for care during these intensely painful and life-threatening episodes and receive the care from NHS staff that we would all want and expect in our hour of need.