Hull’s team of midwives helping couples through the first stages of pregnancy

Communications TeamNews

Becoming parents in 2019? Come along to our Hey Baby Carousel this month to see you through the first months of pregnancy.

Parents can tap into the expertise of Hull’s team of midwives for help with queries or concerns they have about their pregnancies, forms they need to fill in to secure maternity pay or to discuss their options for giving birth.

Now held at the Clinical Skills building on the Hull Royal Infirmary site on the last Wednesday of every month, around 200 people attend the Carousels to pick up tips, advice and support with pregnancy and childbirth.

Birth educators working for Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust will give practical demonstrations on how people can look after their babies in the first few weeks from safer sleeping and how to bathe your baby to healthy eating and accident prevention.

Hey Baby coordinator Melanie Lee

Hey Baby co-ordinator Melanie Lee said: “Our Carousel events are beneficial to couples regardless of the stage of pregnancy.

“Ideally, people can come at the start of their pregnancies, around the 20-week mark as they reach the halfway point and towards the end.

“We also have couples who want to come every month as we always have something new to share with prospective families.”

Carousel will be held at the Clinical Skills Building next to Hull Eye Hospital on Wednesday, January 30, between 6pm and 8pm. You can just turn up as there is no need to book an appointment and you don’t need to stay for the full two hours.

Dads, partners, grandparents, friends and other children are all welcome to join mums-to-be at the event.

 

Hospital ward opens cinema for patients with memory problems

Communications TeamNews

Hull Royal Infirmary has opened a £7,000 cinema showing footage of Yorkshire throughout the decades to help patients with memory problems.

The film booth – complete with cinema seats and a giant screen – has been set up in the middle of Ward 80 to help people reminisce about their past and share memories of growing up in the city.

Dr Yoghini Nagandran, Clinical Lead in the Department of Elderly Medicine, said: “Coming into hospital can be quite a frightening experience for anyone, especially for people with memory problems including dementia.

“We can now show old films which can bring back memories for people and be a starting point of a conversation.

“We had two patients the other day who were complete strangers but watched the films together, enjoyed a chat over a coffee and some biscuits and became friends.

“It is breaking the monotony for people and it has achieved positive results for our patients.”

Ward 80 is the Progression to Discharge Unit where patients recovering from recent illness spend time recuperating before they are discharged home with support or to a care home.

The cinema helps to keep people mobile, encouraging them to move around the ward to prevent muscle wastage and get back into a more normal routine following a hospital stay.

The booth has been designed in the style of an old cinema with film posters advertising classics like Gone With The Wind and Casablanca on the outside.

Footage from the Yorkshire Film Archive shows street scenes and images from rugby matches and sporting events from the 1950s and 60s.

WISHH, the independent charity supporting Hull’s hospitals, was able to fund the £7,000 cost of the cinema thanks to the generosity of its supporters and members of the public.

Susan Lockwood, chair of the board of trustees at WISHH, said: “The cinema is a fantastic addition to the ward and will enhance the care patients already receive from staff.

“We are grateful to the public and our donors who have made this possible.”

Families visiting elderly relatives on the ward can use the booth to make easy conversation.

Dr Dan Harman, Consultant in Elderly Medicine, said: “Our primary concern is to make sure people are safe and we deliver the high-quality care they need.

“However, if we can do that in an environment that’s more homely for elderly patients or those who are frail, that can make a huge difference.

“It’s about remembering they are a person rather than just a patient.”

Younger people at greater risk of serious complications after catching flu

Communications TeamNews

Younger people with existing health problems are being warned they risk serious illness in 2019 if they fail to have the flu jab now.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is appealing to people aged over 16 with conditions known to put them at greater risk of flu, such as asthma or diabetes, to ensure they take up the offer of the free flu vaccine.

NHS staff are anticipating an increase in people admitted to Hull Royal Infirmary suffering serious complications caused by flu over the coming weeks as the country returns to normal after the festive break. Already, the trust is seeing a higher number of cases of flu.

Greta Johnson, Lead Infection Prevention and Control Nurse, said: “We tend to see a surge in admissions over the first few weeks in January because people have come together in large gatherings to celebrate Christmas and New Year.

“Family events and parties are ideal places for viruses to spread and all it can take is a single cough or sneeze to infect an entire room.

“It’s not too late for people to get the flu vaccine and that’s particularly important for the over 16s, who maybe see the vaccine as something for older people.

“Younger people with asthma, diabetes or another health condition should understand they’re at a much greater risk of becoming seriously ill compared to an older person with no existing health conditions and getting the vaccine is the best chance they’ve got of reducing that risk.”

The flu vaccine is free to people aged 16 to 65 with existing health conditions and is available from pharmacists and GP surgeries.

It is not a live virus so, contrary to popular belief, it will not give you flu. If a person becomes ill, it is likely they had already caught the flu or cold virus before receiving the vaccine.

Some people can experience tenderness in their arm following the jab but most people experience no after-effects. The vaccine takes around 48 hours to work and this year’s vaccine is highly effective against the most common strain H1N1 Influenza A.

Health professionals in England look to Australia and its experience of flu during what is their winter and our summer to gauge how it is likely to affect the country.

Australia experienced far fewer numbers of flu this year compared to last year, with figures showing one of the lowest flu rates in five years.

Although flu affected more Australian children under 10 this year, children in England are vaccinated so it is not expected to have as big an impact here.

Greta Johnson said: “We are expecting fewer cases this year but that will make no difference to the people who do catch flu. It can absolutely floor someone and be life-threatening to vulnerable groups so it’s important that people do all they can to protect themselves.

“Catching flu is not like having a bad cold. It can make people very, very poorly. In some cases, it can lead to pneumonia so it is crucial that people get the flu vaccine now if they haven’t already.”

 

Toothache and period pain: the non-emergencies putting unnecessary strain on A&E

Communications TeamNews

Hull Royal Infirmary’s A&E department is being put under strain this festive season by scores of patients attending with minor ailments.

Around 420 patients have attended the department each day over the last three days, and around 200 of those have been through the ‘Minors’ department; numbers such as this are normally seen on a busy Monday rather than over a weekend.

Chief Operating Officer, Teresa Cope, says around two thirds to three quarters of those walking into the ‘Minors’ area – in some cases up to 150 people per day – could and should have sought advice or treatment elsewhere:

“The last few days in our Emergency Department have been incredibly busy. It appears that with Christmas festivities out of the way, many people are starting to seek treatment for minor health problems or niggles such as period pain, toothache and back pain, but A&E is not the place to do this.

“It’s no secret that our hospitals come under pressure over the winter and the patients we admit do tend to be more poorly, often linked to respiratory conditions or flu which is now, once again, doing the rounds.

“With some really sick patients on our hands, both in the ‘Majors’ area of our Emergency Department and throughout our hospital wards, tending to patients with minor ailments which could have been treated just as easily through a pharmacy or walk-in centre takes valuable time and resources away from the seriously ill.

“We have to prioritise the genuine emergencies and our seriously sick patients so, quite simply, those who are coming to A&E because it might be convenient or because they can’t get a doctor’s appointment straight away will still be in for a long wait.”

Teresa also says that while the wards at Hull Royal Infirmary are now free from Norovirus, the hospital is starting to see more cases of flu. Both flu and the winter vomiting bug, Norovirus, can be spread easily in a hospital environment, meaning anyone who attends A&E with diarrhoea, vomiting or flu-like symptoms, could be putting vulnerable patients at risk:

“We’ve seen a number of people walking into A&E in recent days with flu and D&V, and this poses all sorts of risks to the more vulnerable patients in our care.

“These two viruses can spread easily in confined spaces where there are lots of people, and many of the patients in hospital are already very poorly or have weakened immune systems, so getting one of these on top of existing health problems could have very serious implications.”

Teresa and her A&E colleagues are now repeating the call for patients to consider alternative sources of advice and treatment to ensure specialist clinicians’ time can be spent looking after those with life-threatening conditions and in need of urgent treatment.

“Walk-in services are available throughout the New Year period in both Hull and the East Riding, so we’d urge people to use the services that are out there where it’s appropriate to do so, and to help us keep the Emergency Department free for those who really need it.”

For full details of where you can get help and when throughout Hull and the East Riding, simply call NHS 111 or visit www.hullccg.nhs.uk/staywell/

Daniel Dyson writes ’50 thank yous’ to hospital staff who cared for his dying stepfather

Communications TeamNews

A tribute to Graham Dyson and the staff on Ward 50 at Hull Royal Infirmary by Daniel Dyson

In some ways living in a hospital is like being at a festival; you rarely shower, you sleep on the floor, you lose track of the outside world. It just happens to be the worst festival ever. A festival where it rains all the time, the bands all cancel and on the last night someone you love dies. I know this because I recently spent the final six days and five nights of my step-dad’s life on Ward 50, the Renal Ward, at Hull Royal Infirmary.

It was a sustained and heart-breaking ordeal. My mum, my brother and I stayed with him from the moment we were told the end was near, joined regularly by my grandparents, my girlfriend, my step-brothers and other family members and friends. Characteristically he defied expectations and hung on for longer than the doctors had predicted, but ultimately his illnesses were too much even for him. My step-dad, Graham, passed away on Tuesday 4th September. He was an exceptional man and he has left behind an insurmountable void in our lives.

Graham Dyson

I’ve no doubt any time spent in those circumstances is excruciating, but experiencing it for so long made it even more devastating. We wouldn’t have been anywhere else of course, and as long as Graham’s heart kept beating the hope of a miracle lived on, but as the hours ticked by the anxiety and hurt found new exhaustive levels. Each day established itself as the worst we’d faced, only to be immediately surpassed by the next.

For the first forty-eight hours or so Graham could communicate occasionally, even managing to wish my grandma a happy birthday. That memory along with a few others persist as small waves of joy in an otherwise ocean of grief. Graham’s eyes however closed days before his heart stopped and his voice left long before his breath did. From that point onwards we sat, for days, watching him die. In some moments we willed it to happen, for him to be at peace. At others we still believed it could be avoided, that miracles did exist. Personally I clung to this latter approach until the very end, unable to tolerate the alternative.

One of the hardest parts was the regular changes to Graham’s breathing pattern. Time and again he would take three deep breaths and then stop altogether for about ten seconds. The doctors had foreseen this and attempted to prepare us for it, along with the fact that at some point there would be no ten second reprise. Through no fault of their own they failed, and those supposedly short spells were unbearable. The world seemed to stop, like the seconds spent waiting for your fifth player to step forward when you’re 5-4 down on penalties in the Champions League final. But much, much worse.

The circumstances of Graham’s death were particularly tragic too. He was only 69, a now surely premature age for someone who was fit and healthy and wonderful. He’d postponed retirement to take part-time jobs in a care home and the NHS, driven by a Yorkshire sense of industry and communal pride. He and my mum had only gotten married less than two years earlier; having spent most of their nineteen years together thinking there was no need they subsequently concluded it was the best thing they’d ever done. Then, to top it off, he was struck by a combination of kidney and bowel problems that the doctors felt they could have solved had they not been occurring at the same time. Graham had been in hospital for nearly two months prior to us taking up permanent residence at his bedside and for the majority of that time his outlook was generally positive; it was only a week before his death that things changed so drastically. Even the chief consultant conceded that Graham was tragically unlucky.

Given all this, finding ways of coping in the hospital was hard. I couldn’t call on experience; Graham was my first exposure to the death of a true loved one. Football results were all-but meaningless, my mind wouldn’t let me read or listen to music. Upon coming home there were distractions at least; people to tell, cats to feed, a funeral to plan. The world insisted on continuing to spin. In the hospital however we just sat, for days on end, praying for a happy ending that never came.

As ever in life though cope you must, and I felt a determination to be strong for my family, inspired in no small part by the certainty that that’s what Graham would have done. He was a caring and selfless man, perpetually concerned with the wellbeing of others. I can’t begin to imagine what it would have been like to have faced the ordeal alone, or even just with my mum. The experience made me even more committed to supporting the people around me, the same people who in turn support me. Still, even as a close family there were times when we couldn’t remain strong on our own, times when we needed some outside help. Fortunately, we didn’t have to look far.

Staff from Ward 50

In her book Nurses Are From Heaven, Christina Feist-Heilmeier writes that ‘Every nurse was drawn to nursing because of a desire to care, to serve, or to help.’ It is difficult to envisage a place where this is more fitting than on Ward 50 at Hull Royal Infirmary, and not just with regards to the nurses. During such a time the only people who can really help are those who are there, experiencing it too. And help they did; the nurses, the doctors, the administrative staff, the cleaners. They proved an exceptional group of people who together formed a community where even the worst sadness could be just about endured.

It was reasonable to expect their care for Graham to be of a high standard and they did not disappoint on that front. It was their support of his family however where they went beyond the call of duty. They made endless cups of tea, they brought mattresses from other wards, they consistently said the right thing in the right way at the right time. Too often modern-day Britain forgets the importance of community; public services have been ransacked, pubs and youth clubs have closed, political and personal isolationism have soared.  On Ward 50 however a community prevailed; a community of love and support, created and nurtured by the staff.

Daniel Dyson

I can’t help but wonder what it was like for them. I’ve heard it said that any experience can be normalised by recurrence, but every death must still leave its mark, every tear witnessed its own scar. And the affection the staff had for Graham was clear and genuine; he was a gentle man who made a big impression. I’m sure they must have felt their own sorrow, especially given that his outlook was optimistic for so long, but never did they waver, their focus remained entirely on looking after Graham and his family. They never stopped smiling or asking or caring.

I suppose that’s all any of us can do. Since Graham’s death the hardest moments for me have been those spent alone; when I’m with my mum or my brother or my girlfriend strength comes more easily. Graham always put others before himself and I feel a duty to do the same.

Maybe that’s something death teaches us; to learn from those who are gone and to make more of those who remain. To be kind and mindful and present, like the staff on Ward 50. To them I would like to say thank you, for making the worst festival ever that little bit brighter.

Families can play a vital role in keeping loved ones out of hospital

Communications TeamNews

A specialist nurse in infection is appealing to families to make sure older people have at least eight drinks a day to reduce their risk of hospital admissions.

Drinking at least 1.5 litres of fluid or around eight cups a day prevents infections such as Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs), which are particularly common in older people.

People over 65 are also at greater risk of dehydration, which can in turn increase the risk of developing an infection.

Greta Johnson, lead infection prevention and control nurse at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, said families planning to celebrate New Year with their older loved ones can play a part in keeping them well and out of hospital.

She said: “Drinking eight cups a day can reduce the risk of any of us developing certain infections and that’s particularly vital when it comes to more vulnerable members of our community.

“We can help older members of our family to stay well by making sure they drink enough each day. While drinking plenty of water might be something we’re more inclined to do when the weather’s hot, it’s just as important that we drink plenty during the winter too.

“While drinking water might not be appealing on colder days, taking hot drinks such as hot water with lemon or using hot water to dilute sugar-free juice can make all the difference and help stop an older person having to come into hospital if they catch an infection.”

Hospital stays can start older people on a downward spiral of ill health.

It is widely believed that every 10 days of hospital bed rest causes 10 years of muscle ageing in a person over 80. They then return home weaker, more prone to developing further illnesses and more prone to falling, both causing further hospital admissions.

Once an older person contracts an infection, they may require antibiotics which can then lead to them developing a more serious or even life-threatening infection which is resistant to antibiotics.

Keeping hydrated as well as warm and active are all practical steps which can be taken to keep an older person well and reduce the risk of hospital admissions.

Greta Johnson said: “While we will always do our best to care for all patients admitted to hospital, it makes sense to do all we can to prevent them coming into hospital in the first place, particularly for older people.

“People are visiting older relatives at this time of year and we’re hoping they will take this opportunity to ensure they are drinking enough, are warm enough and are mobile to remain in good health.”

Thief steals from young people with cancer at Christmas

Communications TeamNews

A man has been caught on camera stealing a donations tin from a hospital cancer centre just days before Christmas.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is contacting Humberside Police after the donations tin was stolen from the entrance to the Queen’s Centre at Castle Hill Hospital on Saturday.

Members of the public used the tin to donate funds for the Teenage and Young Adults’ Unit when they bought books from a stall in the main foyer of the Queen’s Centre.

Karen Fraser, Team Leader for the Oncology Health Centre and Patient Services, said: “It is awful that anyone could do such a thing at any time of the year, never mind at Christmas.

“We’ve alerted security and they’ll be passing on the CCTV footage to the police.”

Staff alerted senior managers today after realising the box, used to collect donations from members of the public who buy books from a stall in the main foyer, was missing.

Security staff trawled through hours of CCTV footage and spotted the man walking into the hospital on Saturday. Footage then shows him hiding the tin, which had been secured to a table, underneath his jacket.

Karen Fraser said: “Thankfully, the tin is emptied on a Friday so there wouldn’t have been as much in it.

“But we just don’t know how much has been taken because people who bought books on Saturday would have donated money.

“It’s just a sickening thing to happen.”

 

Bereavement midwife helps couple deliver baby after death of their daughter

Communications TeamNews

A couple will celebrate their first Christmas with their baby boy tomorrow after he was delivered by the midwife who helped them when their daughter was stillborn.

Tanya Antcliff, 30, and Luke Sellers, 31, were devastated when their daughter Imogen died in the womb hours before she was born at Hull Women and Children’s Hospital.

Specialist Bereavement Midwife Sue Cooper supported them through the agony of Imogen’s death, keeping in touch and visiting them at their home in East Hull before Tanya discovered she was pregnant again.

Sue helped them throughout Tanya’s pregnancy and then came into hospital in the middle of the night to deliver their son Ronnie in June this year.

Sue Cooper

Tanya said: “Sue was absolutely brilliant. She told us we could contact her at any time and the really nice thing was that she came into hospital about 3 or 4 o’clock in the morning to be with us and deliver Ronnie.

“She’s more like a friend than anything else.”

Tanya had a normal pregnancy and all checks at her 40-week appointment were normal.

She went into labour two days later but midwives couldn’t find Imogen’s heartbeat and the couple discovered their daughter had died.

Tanya is thought to have suffered severe placental abruption at the end of her pregnancy which halted the flow of oxygen to Imogen, causing her baby to die.

“It was just the worst thing,” said Tanya. “It was the worst time of our lives.”

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust was one of the first 11 trusts selected to pilot the National Bereavement Care Pathway in 2017 to support families through the deaths of babies during pregnancy, labour or shortly after birth.

Sue met Tanya, a sales assistant, and Luke, a joiner, within hours of them losing Imogen on March 8, 2017.

“It was a bit of a blur at the time but Sue introduced herself while we were in hospital and then kept in touch with us,” said Tanya.

“I got really bad anxiety afterwards and she was great, coming round to see me and Luke. We wouldn’t have got through it without her.”

The couple were overcome with joy and anxiety when they discovered Tanya was pregnant for the second time six months after Imogen’s death.

“Sue had already told me she’d be there for us if we decided to have another baby and she was,” said Tanya. “I felt really safe with her.

“I didn’t enjoy my pregnancy and I don’t think I ever will, even if I get pregnant again, because I had gone full-term and still lost her.

“People forget that men go through this too and Sue was there for Luke too because he was just as scared as I was.”

Sue was constantly at the end of the phone if either Luke or Tanya had any concerns and she was able to reassure Tanya by letting her hear her baby’s heartbeak whenever she wanted.

Tanya was on medication throughout her pregnancy to prevent a repeat of any problems with her placenta and was due to be induced at 37 weeks. However, her anxiety grew as her due date approached and she was induced at 36 weeks.

Ronnie arrived in the world on June 1, delivered by Sue and weighing 7lb, the same as Imogen.

Now almost seven months old, Ronnie is a healthy baby boy and the couple will toast their friendship with Sue over Christmas.

Tanya said: “Of course we’ll be thinking of Imogen but we’ve got Ronnie and it’s all turned out good in the end.

“We still keep in touch with Sue, sending pictures and letting her know what Ronnie’s doing now.

“I think we will always keep in touch with her.”

Sue was joined by second Specialist Bereavement Midwife Sarah Green, expanding the service to 45 hours a week. All trust midwives are also undergoing specialist training in helping families who lose their babies.

Sue said: “Losing a baby is a terrible experience for any parent and something no one should ever have to go through. But it’s important that we have support in place to help when the worst does happen.

“As Specialist Bereavement Midwives, you meet couples at the worst times of their lives. It was an honour to be with Tanya and Luke after Imogen’s death and to be with them when Ronnie was born.

“I would like to wish them all a very Happy Christmas.”

“Panto-therapy” earns Castle Hill team the title of ‘Most festive hospital department 2018’

Communications TeamNews, Queen's Centre

A team of staff helping to treat patients for cancer has been named Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust’s most festive department of 2018.

For the past three years, wards and patient-facing departments across Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital have been competing for the prestigious title and, more importantly, to win custody of the now famous Dr Hermon Cup.

The Dr Hermon Cup dates back to 1938, when the then-famous radiologist presented the shiny silver trophy to the best decorated ward in the old Anlaby Road Hospital.

For reasons unknown, the cup then became ‘lost’ alongside other photos and artefacts in the hospital archive, until it was found last year by Mr Colin Vize, Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon.  The trophy, which celebrates its 80th birthday this year, was then dusted off, polished up, and used as an incentive for staff to go the extra festive mile for patients.

Teams have certainly risen to the challenge this year, with hot chocolate carts, glittery casts for broken bones, and a special pet Christmas tree for patients who are missing their own animals while in hospital.

Yet in the face of stiff competition, the Radiotherapy Team at the Queen’s Centre, Castle Hill, has emerged triumphant thanks to ‘panto-therapy’ which sees all patients offered a ticket, programme and popcorn at the Box Office (reception) before receiving their treatment at one of five ‘pantomimes’ (treatment rooms). Temporarily renamed the ‘Queen’s Theatre’, patients in the Radiotherapy Department can also step into a special pantomime photo booth complete with props, take part in the Christmas Quiz and even sing along with one of several daily carol singing (or bagpipe playing!) sessions.

Now in its third year, the Trust’s festive ward competition continues to bring teams together and create festive cheer for patients who find themselves in hospital at Christmastime.

Mr Vize, who is also a member of the competition judging panel, says:

“Christmas is never a good time to be in hospital, so it’s fantastic to see so many staff across both Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill going the extra mile to create festive cheer and ensure patients’ time here is as enjoyable as it can be.

“Our competition is designed as a bit of fun to raise some smiles among staff, visitors and patients, but it also has other benefits.

“Many staff end up sacrificing their own time with friends and family over the festive season because they’re busy caring for others, so this is also a good way of bringing people together and rewarding their efforts to provide patients with a more positive experience while they’re here.

“Competition was fierce this year, but the Radiotherapy Team just edged it with their quirky take on treatment. We’ve been very clear that we weren’t just looking at decorations, we were looking at how teams are engaging their patients, making them feel included and making their time in hospital that bit more pleasant. It’s amazing the lengths some teams have gone to; it just shows how well our staff can pull together and how much they really do care about their patients.

“In the case of the Radiotherapy Team, I have no doubt that all the work and the planning they’ve put in will be helping to boost the spirits of their patients receiving cancer treatment, and maybe even contributing to a quicker recovery for some.”

Barbara Whitaker, Deputy Radiotherapy Manager (pictured right, holding the Dr Hermon Cup) says:

‘The Radiotherapy team is delighted to have been named this year’s winners of the Dr Hermon Cup. It was amazing to see the cup and the hamper being delivered and to find out that we had actually won! The staff have put in a mighty effort to bring festive joy to all of their patients and have had a great deal of fun in the process. It has been a real pleasure to receive some wonderful feedback from patients and other staff and has really made all of the effort worthwhile. Now staff and patients will  set about enjoying all of the goodies in the hamper and begin the planning for defending our title next year.”

Hospital staff in ‘Frantic Friday’ appeal to festive party-goers

Communications TeamNews

Major pub chain JD Wetherspoon’s is supporting a hospital campaign to keep Hull’s A&E for medical emergencies as the city prepares for Frantic Friday.

Wetherspoon’s, which owns the Admiral of the Humber in Anlaby Road and Three John Scotts, Lowgate, both in Hull, and The Cross Keys in Lairgate, Beverley, is supporting the #SeriousStuff campaign by Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust.

Emergency services are bracing themselves for an onslaught of calls on Friday as workers from offices, factories and firms start their festive break and overindulge in alcohol at Christmas parties.

The three Wetherspoon pubs will display posters urging customers to use Urgent Treatment Centres at Bransholme, Beverley, Goole and Bridlington, the GP Walk-In Centre at Wilberforce Health Centre in Hull City Centre and their pharmacists instead of turning up at A&E.

Beermats on tables and vinyl stickers on floors and windows will display details of alternatives to A&E and staff will direct customers to other services if they need medical attention.

Joe Sanderson, Area Manager of JD Wetherspoon’s, said: “When we were asked by the trust to support their Serious Stuff campaign, we didn’t hesitate.

“We are well aware that the NHS has to be protected for those who need it most. This winter, our staff will be encouraging our customers to ensure they keep Hull’s A&E for genuine life-threatening emergencies.

“There are plenty of alternatives to A&E all over the city and across East Yorkshire. We’re making sure our staff will know where the Urgent Treatment Centres, the GP walk-in centres and the nearest pharmacists are so they can direct people if they require medical attention.

“By all pulling together this Christmas, we can make a real difference to the NHS so frontline staff can focus on saving lives.”

Hull Royal Infirmary’s own staff will be on the streets on Friday appealing to party-goers to use its Emergency Department wisely.

Dr Biju Cherian, a Consultant in Emergency Medicine and Clinical Lead at Hull’s Emergency Department, said: “Every year, during this season, we see increasing numbers of people coming to A&E after drinking too much, ending up hurt in drunken fights or injuring themselves after they’ve drunk too much.

“All of this places even more pressure on our staff at a time when we’re already dealing with an influx of seriously injured or seriously ill patients with winter viruses and infections.

“The public can help us by drinking in moderation and responsibly and by using alternatives to A&E like the Urgent Treatment Centre at Bransholme or the GP Walk-In Centre at Wilberforce Health Centre in the city centre if they need medical attention.

“We’re not trying to spoil anyone’s fun but people need to think very carefully before choosing to come here.

“We’re always open but it’s crucial that the hospital’s Emergency Department is here for the people who need us to save their lives.”