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Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust: A&E 4-Hour Performance

Real NHS England A&E waiting-time data for March 2026 in the South East NHS region β€” plus this trust's Gera A&E Pressure Index.

What is the A&E 4-hour waiting time at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust?

As of March 2026, 72.1% of major (Type 1) A&E attendances at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust were admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours β€” so an estimated 27.9% waited longer β€” from 12,638 Type 1 attendances, against the 76% NHS standard, per NHS England A&E statistics. Gera re-dates this monthly.

Source:NHS England β€” A&E Attendances and Emergency Admissions, Monthly StatisticsΒ·as of March 2026updated monthly (last: )
Gera A&E Pressure Index25 / 100Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust ranks 66 of 118 English Type 1 A&E providers by A&E pressure (1 = highest pressure). Higher score = more patients facing long waits at a busy department.How this index is calculated
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust A&E figures β€” March 2026 (NHS England, OGL v3.0)
MeasureValueWhat it means
Type 1 (major A&E) 4-hour performance72.1%Standard is 76%
Estimated chance of a 4+ hour wait27.9%Monthly average, not a per-visit prediction
Type 1 attendances12,638Major A&E department only
Attendances over 4 hours (Type 1)3,523Waited longer than 4 hours
All-types 4-hour performance79.9%Type 1 + Type 2 + other A&E units
12-hour DTA waits5Waited 12h+ from decision to admit
vs England Type 1 average+8.2ppEngland Type 1 average 63.9%

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Check another provider, or this one again, against the England average.

At Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, in the latest month, 72.1% of major (TypeΒ 1) A&E patients were seen within 4Β hours β€” so an estimated 27.9% waited longer than 4Β hours, from 12,638 TypeΒ 1 attendances.

Seen within 4 hours
72.1%
vs England average
+8.2pp
England 63.9%
Gera A&E Pressure Index
25 / 100

5 patients at this trust waited 12+ hours from decision-to-admit to admission in the latest month. The 4-hour figure is a monthly average for the whole department, not a prediction for any single visit.

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is performing at 72.1% β€” below the NHS 76% standard. For a non-emergency, see a GeraClinic doctor today and avoid a 4+ hour wait.

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Other A&E providers in South East

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Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust A&E waiting times: FAQs

What is the A&E 4-hour performance at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust?
In March 2026, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust saw 72.1% of Type 1 (major) A&E attendances admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours, from 12,638 Type 1 attendances. Across all A&E types at the trust the figure was 79.9%. The England all-types average was 76.6% and the operational standard is 76%. Source: NHS England A&E monthly statistics, March 2026.
Am I likely to be seen within 4 hours at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust's A&E?
On the latest data (March 2026), 72.1% of major (Type 1) A&E patients at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust were seen within 4 hours, so roughly 27.9% waited longer than 4 hours. This is an area-wide monthly average, not a prediction for any individual visit, and varies by time of day and acuity. For a 999 emergency always call 999; for non-emergencies a GeraClinic online consultation can often be arranged the same day.
How many people waited over 12 hours to be admitted at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust?
5 patients at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust waited 12 hours or more from the decision to admit to actually being admitted in March 2026. These "12-hour DTA waits" are a key NHS pressure indicator the figure is published monthly by NHS England.
What is the Gera A&E Pressure Index for Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust?
The Gera A&E Pressure Index for Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is 25 out of 100. It is computed transparently as (1 βˆ’ Type 1 4-hour performance) Γ— Type 1 monthly attendances, then min-max normalised across all 118 English Type 1 A&E providers (the busiest, lowest-performing trust scores 100). A higher score means more patients facing long waits at a high-volume department. It is derived only from the real NHS England March 2026 data.
What can I do instead of waiting at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust's A&E?
A&E is for serious or life-threatening emergencies. For non-emergency issues β€” minor illness, prescriptions, advice, sick notes or a second opinion β€” a GeraClinic online consultation with a UK-registered doctor can usually happen the same day, avoiding a long A&E wait. Always call 999 or attend A&E for chest pain, breathing difficulty, severe bleeding, stroke signs or other emergencies.

Avoid a 4+ hour wait at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is performing at 72.1% on the 4-hour standard β€” below the 76% target. For a non-emergency, see a UK-registered GeraClinic doctor online, often the same day. For a 999 emergency always call 999.

Contains public sector information published by NHS England and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: NHS England β€” A&E Attendances and Emergency Admissions, Monthly Statistics (March 2026, published 14 May 2026).