A little misleading. Part of the problem in this area is bed blocking due to lack of suitable places to send people who need a certain amount of care.Our population is ageing,
Hospitals switched to a different way of working some time ago now. Getting people in and out as quickly as possible aided by same day anaesthetics to some extend but the same ideas hold what ever they use or are doing. It's best to get people out rather than have them lying about in beds.
It's hard to find meaningful figures that show how things are over all. Specific things such as death in hospital etc isn't that clear as it only counts that aspect such as time in hospital before death which doesn't relate to beds in total. This is acute care too, not general. This is a bit of an interesting read
NHS hospital bed numbers
The number of hospital beds in England has more than halved over the past 30 years. This explainer looks at data on hospital beds, explores the drivers underpinning the changes it shows, and considers whether further reductions to bed numbers are realistic.
Politics is currently making more hospitals needed noises. Also diagnostic centres what ever those turn out to be and we all know staffing is low and that may even reflect on usage levels of the current bed count.
