Emergency Department is the modern term for the Accident and Emergency Department (A&E). The staff in the emergency department are doctors and nurses who are specially trained in assessing and managing emergencies: life or limb threatening illness or injuries, and minor injuries. The Emergency Department is open seven days a week, 24 hours a day all year. The department at Macclesfield sees 52,000 new patients each year.
Sometimes your problem can be better sorted by other services that work within the health service. The doctors in the A&E Department are not GP’s, and so if your illness is minor, long standing and not life threatening, it would be beneficial for you to see your own GP.
You can access the following services for advice before you decide whether you need to come to the emergency department:
If however, after considering these options you are still unsure, then you should attend the Emergency Department.
If you have any of the following illnesses, injuries or symptoms, you should come to the Emergency Department:
We also have a minor injuries service staffed by specially trained emergency nurse practitioners who will see the following types of problems:
You will be seen by an experienced Emergency Department nurse who will quickly make an assessment of you “TRIAGE” and decide who will be best to see you. (We aim to do this within 15 minutes of your arrival in the department.) You will be given a “priority” category according to your signs and symptoms.This is why sometimes you may see another patient be called before you, even though you might have been waiting longer.
You will give your details to a receptionist and then you be asked to sit and wait in the waiting room. You will then be called to see a doctor or an emergency nurse practitioner depending on how you were prioritised at triage.
If you are bringing a child to the department, you will be asked to wait in a separate waiting area with toys, books and a DVD player after they have been assessed by the triage nurse.
All staff in the department have an ID badge stating their name and position. If you are not sure who they are, please feel free to ask them. It can be confusing sometimes!
The Emergency Department consists of a team of different people all working together to provide you with a high quality of care.
These might be :
The doctor or nurse practitioner will listen to you telling them about why you have come to the department. They will then examine you to gain a better understanding of what may be wrong. They will then decide whether you need to have further tests done to help them make a decision about your illness/ injury and how they can help you. The types of tests you may be given are:
Sometimes after these tests, the doctor may decide he or she needs to ask a more specialised doctor to see you, this doctor then may send you home with a management plan or ask you to stay in hospital for treatment and/or further investigations. If you are ever unsure why someone is doing a test on you, please ask, we would like you to feel happy about what we are doing.
The department is made up of different areas to help us provide the best and safest care to you. Each area is staffed with an experienced Staff nurse and is overseen by a sister.
A visit to the Emergency Department can be frightening for a child. We endeavour to allow your child to be seen in an individual cubicle with access to the childrens waiting area. This area has toys and books, and also has a DVD player to help your child feel more relaxed. The staff in the department all have training in various aspects of care of the child, and we are supported by registered childrens nurses on many shifts. If your child is unwell and needs more specialist care, they will be seen by a paediatrician on the children’s ward. This will be arranged by the emergency doctor seeing your child.
If you have time before to come to the department it would be beneficial to bring a favourite toy, book, pacifier, such as a dummy or a favourite drink or snack. Please always check your child is OK to eat or drink though before letting them!
We aim to see children as quickly as possible, although on some occasions it may not be possible if the department is extremely busy. We have access to play specialists to assist us if your child requires a treatment that they might not find fun!
The children's waiting area has a changing area for babies and a private room for breastfeeding mothers.