OVERNIGHT accident and emergency services at a hospital are set to be suspended due to staff shortages.

The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital (SaTH) NHS Trust today agreed to temporarily suspend overnight A&E services at the Princess Royal Hospital (PRH) in Telford to ensure patient safety.

Dr Kevin Eardley, care group medical director for unscheduled care, said: “This is not where we want to be but we have been very clear for some time now about the fragility of the EDs at RSH and PRH, and that we cannot continue to operate both sites overnight in the long-term with staffing levels as they are.

“We don’t have enough doctors and nurses to safely staff both of our A&Es 24-hours-a day, seven-days-a-week and, as a result, we are relying on the goodwill of our medical and nursing staff to keep those services running. This has put them under enormous pressure, and is no longer sustainable.

“I want to reassure everyone that our business continuity plans have been under constant review, and robustly tested, to ensure that there will be as little impact on patients as possible.

“We have, and continue to, work closely with our health partners including our commissioners, ambulance services and neighbouring Trusts, on this.”

A closure from 8pm until 8am is expected to happen in November.

The temporary overnight suspension is likely to last for six months and any re-opening would be dependent on the ability to provide safe services.

Until then the services will continue 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week.

A SaTH spokesman said that once the plan for safely managing the overnight suspension has been agreed there will be a programme of full communications aimed at the public, staff and other bodies.

The decision means that the PRH A&E department will be closed to ambulance admissions at 8pm.

Ambulances will be diverted to neighbouring trusts.

The Urgent Care Centre will accept patients until 8pm

PRH will continue to accept GP referred admissions in those specialities managed at PRH between 8am and 8pm, seven-days-a-week, and stroke patients arriving by ambulance will be admitted via a direct pathway to the appropriate clinical ward.

The Royal College of Medicine (RCEM) recommends that SaTH’s two A&E Departments should have between them: 20 emergency medicine consultants – when they have just 10 (four permanent and six locums) - and 32 middle grade doctors – when they have just 11.

Nurse staffing levels are a concern with the level of temporary and permanent vacancies meaning a heavy reliance on agency nurses or shifts left unfilled.

SaTH chief executive Simon Wright said: “This is the hardest decision that we have ever had to make, but it is the right one to safeguard our patients in the current circumstances.

“I want to reassure everyone that we remain committed to providing the safest, kindest quality of care. We also remain committed in our efforts to recruit to our emergency departments.”