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Integrated Urgent Care (IUC) describes a range of services including NHS 111 and Out of Hours services, which aim to ensure a seamless patient experience with minimum handoffs and access to a clinician where required.
The IUC ADC became the official source of IUC statistics in April 2021, when the NHS 111 Minimum Dataset (NHS 111 MDS) was merged into a revised version of the IUC ADC. Since then, a provisional subset of the IUC ADC data is published in the month after the collection end date (eg, April data published...
Monthly RTT waiting times data has been published since March 2007. Initially data was only published for cases where patients started treatment during the month and the treatment involved admission to hospital (completed admitted pathways). Completed non-admitted pathway data (cases where patients completed...
The Intermediate Care Data Collection was introduced on 29 July 2024, and was previously the Community Daily Discharge Sitrep. Amendments were made to ensure alignment with the Intermediate Care Framework and improve the insight available to systems, regions and nationally, to support demand and capacity...
The Waiting List Minimum Dataset (WLMDS) is a weekly data collection relating to demand, activity and waiting lists for elective care.
These reports provide information on the waiting times of people referred with suspected cancer or breast symptoms and subsequently told the outcome of their diagnosis, and treated for cancer by the NHS in England.
The suite of metrics report on the percentage of discharges within certain thresholds and the total bed days after discharge ready date for patients discharged within certain thresholds.
Daily returns are collected from acute trusts and includes data bed availability for adult and paediatric general and acute beds – split by Core and Escalation beds, as well as adult critical care, paediatric intensive care and neonatal critical care. The data also includes counts of patients with a...
Virtual wards (also known as hospital at home) allow patients to get the care they need at home safely and conveniently, rather than being in hospital. This includes either preventing avoidable hospital admissions or supporting people to safely leave hospital sooner.
The GP Patient Survey covers GP practice services and asks about your last contact, your last appointment and overall experience. The survey questionnaire also includes questions about when your GP practice is closed, your health and pharmacy and NHS dentistry services.