A&E is such a crucial part of the health system, & I think the forecasts on footfall which are done as part of forward planning as in any business, may have underestimated how many A&E staff & space would be needed. The acute response to Covid scrambled people & equipment together to fight the storm, but TBH it's still not back to normal - lower immunity to bugs that are endemic (flu, strep A, RSV), people who have been on waiting lists for elective surgery reaching crisis point, and patient difficulty with reaching GPs and a certain reluctance with GPs to take on anything acute & complex perhaps, when they are so busy.Also the increase in MH problems since the pandemic, as A&E are at the sharp end for this too. Add that to the well-publicised lack of social care provision to discharge people to which makes it difficult to admit patients for ongoing care, & they really are in a difficult place. Anyone working in A&E at the moment is a total hero to me, & I hope everything possible is being done to recruit & train people for the longer term to do this vital job. Private healthcare as it exists in this country can't help here.