‘Double whammy’ of flu and strikes a risk to patients, Streeting says
Hospitals could struggle with rising numbers of flu patients and forthcoming strikes by resident doctors in England next week, says Health Secretary.
Nick Triggle, Tabby Wilson and Philippa RoxbyBBC News
EPA/ShutterstockHealth Secretary Wes Streeting has said he is “extremely worried” about a “double whammy” of rising numbers of flu patients in hospitals and forthcoming strikes by resident doctors in England next week.
Speaking to LBC, Streeting said the current situation was “probably the worst pressure the NHS has faced since Covid”.
In the week up to Sunday there were 2,660 flu cases a day on average in hospital, which NHS England said was the equivalent of having three hospitals full of flu patients.
A five-day strike by resident doctors in England, the new name for junior doctors, is set to begin on 17 December.
‘Super flu’ circulating
There are hopes the strike could be called off. The doctors’ union, the British Medical Association, has agreed to poll its members to see if they are willing to call off the walkout, with the results of the vote to be released on Monday.
In an interview with LBC, Streeting questioned why the BMA hadn’t taken up his offer of pushing the strike back to January “if they wanted to just give me a kicking”.
He said: “I can only assume that the reason why they refuse to do that is because they know that this week will be most painful for the NHS.”
The number of patients in hospital with influenza has risen more than 50% in the past week, with officials warning there is still no sign of it peaking yet.
Flu has come early this winter, and it looks to be a particularly nasty season because of a new mutated version of the virus which is circulating, say experts. Many are now calling it “super flu”, but it is not more severe or harder to treat.
In another interview, the health secretary said there were no plans to ask the general public to wear masks, although if people visiting hospitals or care homes were encouraged to wear one, he would ask them to do so.
The medical director for the NHS in London, Chris Streather, said the flu situation was “well within the boundaries” of what the NHS could cope with and that hospitals were better prepared for large disease outbreaks since the Covid pandemic.
Speculation is probably not helpful and can cause people to worry, he added.
The number of patients in hospital with flu is at its highest level at this time of year since records began – although they only date back to 2021 and so do not capture the two worst flu seasons of the past 15 years which were seen in 2014-15 and 2017-18.
Officials said cases had continued rising throughout the week, with fears they could top 5,000 by the weekend.
In Scotland, the number of confirmed cases rose by nearly a quarter in the last week, while the number of people admitted to hospital for flu went up 15%.
The picture was similar in Wales and Northern Ireland, with children and young people particularly affected, according to health officials there.
Some schools have had to bring back Covid-like measures to prevent the spread of the virus. One site in Caerphilly had to close temporarily while some schools in Aberdeenshire reduced their hours.
Children and young people aged five to 14 also had the highest positivity rates for flu in England.
But in terms of who is most affected or sickest, hospital admission rates for flu in England are highest among people over 75 and children under five.

Flu rates began rising a month earlier than normal this year driven by a mutated strain of the virus. The dominant strain is H3N2, but it has some genetic changes this year.
It means the general public has not encountered this exact version of flu before, which means there is maybe less immunity. Vaccines still work though.
Data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), which takes into account levels of infection in the community as well as hospitals, shows infection rates are continuing to rise, but not as sharply as they were in the previous week.
But officials stressed it was too early to take that as a sign that flu could be peaking, adding that the virus was unpredictable and a lull could be followed by another surge.
NHS England medical director Prof Meghana Pandit said: “This unprecedented wave of super flu is leaving the NHS facing a worst-case scenario for this time of year – with staff being pushed to the limit to keep providing the best possible care for patients.”
Dr Conall Watson, an infectious diseases expert at the UKHSA, urged people who are eligible for a free flu vaccine on the NHS – which includes the over 65s, those with certain health conditions and pregnant women – to still come forward ahead of the Christmas period.
It can take up to two weeks following vaccination to develop the fullest protection from the jab, Dr Watson added.
Dr Vicky Price, president of the Society for Acute Medicine, accused NHS England and the government of using winter viruses as a “convenient scapegoat” for the “predictable breakdown” in NHS capacity caused by workforce shortages.
“The situation in emergency departments has become so dire that what was once considered a critical incident is now seen as normal and routine. What is happening is not an isolated emergency, but the culmination of systemic failure.”
Earlier this week, BMA resident doctors committee chairman, Dr Jack Fletcher, said the offer from the government was “the result of thousands of resident doctors showing that they are prepared to stand up for their profession and its future”.
He said they had “forced the government to recognise the scale of the problems”, but said the offer did nothing to restore pay for doctors.

