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"A&E attendance"

About: Royal Devon & Exeter Hospital (Wonford) / Accident and emergency Sidwell Street Clinic / NHS Walk-in Centre

(as the patient),

Sadly, this month I had to contribute to activity stats and attend the ED on a Sunday afternoon, and then reattend Monday morning, due to a lot of pain in my foot. I tried to avoid the ED by going to the Minor injuries unit in the first instance, but due to a lack of imaging was sent to Wonford. In both cases, I was out in 3 hours, which is encouraging. however, despite a massive limp due to foot pain, no one offered to help, and I had to ask for crutches on the second day.

A few pieces of feedback for consideration in the spirit of improvement:

•No imaging in minor injuries unit is an oversight 

•ED access /design:

oThe reception desks are far from the door if you have an injury to your legs and are alone.

oThat they point away from the door made them less obvious as to where to go as well.

o for other people: the paediatrics waiting area being separated and seemingly without staff in it was causing confusion for parents and children. The teenagers were bemused to being sent to the paediatrics area as well.

oThe two triage rooms was a serious bottleneck even at low volumes. A third room to the left when sitting was being used, but the member of staff there was constantly having to cross the waiting area to do something else (taking up their valuable time).

oSigns stated that wait times couldn’t be given, but even some indications of estimated time could help to set expectations.

•Only the radiographer introduced themselves to me on Sunday.

•After getting x-ray I was asked to return to the doctor’s room, which was then empty meaning I was alone in the clinical area and not challenged / helped back to patient side.

•I had to reattend on a Monday as the pain increased markedly, and ED team said to come back in as no imaging at MIU.

oI was sent to the ENPs (being called forward en masse, with no explanation of where we were going).

oAll people introduced themselves during this part.

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Responses

Response from Tamara Martin Garcia, Sister, Emergency Department (Eastern Services), Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust 6 days ago
Tamara Martin Garcia
Sister, Emergency Department (Eastern Services),
Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust

Sister Emergency Department

Submitted on 08/11/2025 at 13:40
Published on Care Opinion at 13:40


picture of Tamara Martin Garcia

Dear aardwolf,

Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback following your recent visits to the Minor Injuries Unit and the Emergency Department at Wonford. We appreciate your comments and are sorry to hear about the difficulties you experienced.

Not all of our Minor Injuries Units have 24/7 X-ray facilities, and we understand how this can be inconvenient when imaging is needed. I will pass this feedback to the relevant services so it can be considered as part of ongoing service reviews.

Our Emergency Department has recently undergone a major refurbishment, and we have worked hard to make the best possible use of the existing space. We appreciate your comments about the design and accessibility, and we understand your perspective on how these could be improved further.

We are always happy to assist patients in the department, and we are sorry that you did not feel supported with mobility during your visits. Your feedback will be shared with the team as a reminder of the importance of offering help proactively.

The paediatric and adult areas have been separated to ensure patients are seen by the most appropriate professionals and to improve efficiency. We do appreciate that this can be confusing for teenagers; however, legally patients under 18 are still classified as children. Each young person is assessed individually, and since the refurbishment, the new children’s area has helped us to see paediatric patients more quickly and effectively.

We usually aim to have at least two triage nurses working, and sometimes three when staffing allows. Triage is usually a brief process, but can take longer if staff need to escort patients to other areas (such as X-ray) or make referrals to other professionals.

We do try to provide guidance on waiting times; however, as you noted, these can change rapidly depending on emergency arrivals or patient priorities. I will pass on your feedback so we can look into restoring our waiting time screens, though these can only ever provide approximate information.

Finally, we are continuing to improve signage throughout the department following our refurbishment, and your comments will help inform this work.

Thank you again for sharing your experience so thoughtfully. We value your feedback and wish you a speedy recovery.

Kind regards,


Tamara Martin Garcia

Emergency Department Sister

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