A few months ago, during separate visits to an emergency department and an urgent care center, I experienced what many patients and clinicians now consider routine: long waits, crowded spaces, and visible strain on staff. It raised a familiar question that I’ve been asking for years: If the bottleneck is the emergency department, why does adding capacity so rarely solve the problem?
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Throughout modern healthcare systems, so-called bottlenecks are usually symptoms of deeper system constraints rather than fundamental shortages of space or effort. To fix the flow, we must stop looking at where the line is forming and start looking at why the line exists in the first place.
The bottleneck we all point to
Emergency departments are frequently blamed for delays in care. Recent data show a staggering trend: In late 2025, more than 160,000 patients in England’s National Health Service waited 12 hours or longer in emergency departments in a single month. Performance against the four-hour standard has fallen far below historical expectations, with tens of thousands waiting half a day just for a bed after the decision to admit had been made.
These delays are real, and the risks to patient safety are unacceptable. However, labeling the emergency department as the “bottleneck” often halts deeper inquiry precisely when it is needed most.
Why the constraint isn’t where it appears
In most cases, emergency departments are doing exactly what they were designed to do: assess, stabilize, and determine the next step. Persistent delays typically occur after that decision is made.
Patients wait because inpatient beds are occupied by individuals who are medically ready for discharge but can’t leave due to:
• Care coordination challenges and post-acute placement gaps
• Transportation delays or rigid discharge windows
• Staffing and scheduling rules that prioritize departmental silos over system throughput
National reporting consistently shows that delayed discharges and inpatient flow—not ER capacity alone—are the true drivers of prolonged waits. The emergency department is simply the most visible choke point; the true constraint lies downstream.
Bottlenecks by design
Many of today’s bottlenecks aren’t clinical or physical. They are artifacts of policy and workflow design—what we might call “artificial scarcity.” Consider how these “design choices” manifest:
• Discharges cluster at specific times of day to suit administrative routines.
• Transfer approvals are only available during standard business hours.
• Transportation and post-acute coordination operate independently of clinical readiness.
Each of these decisions may appear reasonable in isolation. Together, they create a system where beds exist but can’t be used. This isn’t a resource problem; it’s a design problem.
Four common sources of ‘false bottlenecks’
In many healthcare organizations, perceived bottlenecks usually trace back to four specific patterns:
1. Legacy policies—rules that were created for a different era of medicine and never revisited
2. Misaligned metrics—performance indicators that reward local efficiency (departmental “wins”) at the expense of total system flow
3. Siloed planning—resource optimization that focuses on individual parts of the patient journey instead of the end-to-end outcome
4. Risk aversion—static assumptions that default to “no” or “wait” rather than dynamic clinical assessment
From capacity to flow
High-performing organizations recognize that adding more beds to a broken system often just amplifies the inefficiency. To move from a “capacity” mindset to a “flow” mindset, leaders must shift their focus:
• From utilization to flow—don’t just aim for 100% bed occupancy; aim for movement.
• From activity to throughput—measuring how much we do is less important than measuring how effectively patients move through the system.
• From departmental success to system performance—a “green” dashboard in one department is meaningless if the patient is stuck in the hallway.
Final thoughts
Persistent waits, crowded departments, and clinician burnout are often treated as operational inconveniences. In reality, they are quality problems rooted in system design.
If your organization is struggling with a persistent bottleneck, you should resist the urge to ask how to work around it, or how to fund more capacity. Instead, you should be asking the harder, more radical question:
“What thinking put this bottleneck here in the first place?”
Sources
1. NHS England. “A&E attendances and emergency admissions data.” Oct. 2025.
2. NHS Providers. “NHS Activity Tracker: Acute Sector.” Dec. 2025.
3. Care Quality Commission. “The State of Health Care and Adult Social Care in England.” 2024–2025.
4. National Health Executive. “England’s Emergency Departments Faced Record 12-Hour Waits.” 2025.
5. American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP). “Emergency Department Crowding and Boarding.”
6. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). “Managing patient access and flow in emergency department to improve patient safety.” Dec. 2010.
7. American Hospital Association (AHA). “Hospital capacity, workforce shortages, and patient throughput reports.” 2024.
8. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). “Hospital quality and patient flow measures.” Jan. 2026

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