Index  ›  health  ›  BBC
health · BBC ↗

Critical incident stood down at Addenbrooke's A&E in Cambridge

BBC Published Jul 2, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge declared a critical incident on Tuesday after experiencing unprecedented demand, with 127 patients waiting in A&E and some waiting up to 24 hours for admission, according to an internal staff email seen by the BBC.
127 patients · patients waiting in A&Eat least 24 hours · maximum wait time for admission15 ambulances · ambulances waiting outside the emergency department
BBC, News organisation reporting on internal staff email
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust stated that ambulances were unable to offload patients promptly during the critical incident, with 15 ambulances waiting outside the emergency department at one point and more expected, according to an internal staff email.
15 ambulances · ambulances waiting outside the emergency department
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Trust via internal staff email
View source ↗

A hospital which had 127 patients waiting at A&E, sparking a critical incident, has returned to normal conditions.

The incident was declared at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge on Tuesday after it experienced "unprecedented demand". It was stood down at 17:00 BST on Wednesday.

At one point, 127 patients were waiting in A&E with some waiting up to 24 hours for admission, while ambulances were queuing outside, according to a staff email seen by the BBC.

A spokesperson for Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust apologised to patients and thanked them for their understanding.

The internal staff email reported that ambulances had been unable to offload patients promptly and at one point, there were 15 waiting outside the emergency department with more expected.

The spokesperson said: "We are grateful to our staff for their hard work and the understanding of our patients during this exceptional period of high demand.

"We apologise to anyone who has experienced longer than usual waits during this time.

"Our staff continue to focus on managing demand safely and effectively and ensuring those with the most urgent clinical needs are prioritised."

In basic terms, a critical incident means an NHS trust or health body is struggling to meet the demands being placed on its services.

On Tuesday, the trust said it would prioritise patients with the highest level of need and urged the public "only to attend A&E in a serious and life-threatening emergency".

Do you have a story suggestion for Cambridgeshire? Contact us below.

Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, external, Instagram, external and X, external.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error