-In the UK, most patients admitted to hospital with acute neurological problems are not looked after or even seen by a consultant neurologist. As a result, the outcome of their care may be suboptimal. The Association of British Neurologists believes that, in order to provide a reasonable service, the number of consultant neurologists will have to increase more than threefold, to about 1,400. This should be achievable in the next 10-15 years and would bring UK neurological services up to the standards that already obtain in comparable European countries.
KEY WORDS: neurology, neurology servicesThe current situation About one-tenth of adult patients coming to an accident & emergency department (A&E) have a neurological problem -mostly stroke, headache and alteration of consciousness 1,2 . Between one-tenth and one-fifth of patients admitted to hospital because of a medical problem have a neurological disorder -the majority have stroke, epilepsy, dementia or headache, and smaller numbers have multiple sclerosis in relapse or complicated by infection, the Guillain-Barre syndrome, cranial nerve palsies, meningitis and encephalitis [3][4][5][6] . However, only 8% of patients in hospital with epilepsy and less than half the patients with multiple sclerosis are under the care of a neurologist -most are looked after by general physicians and geriatricians 7 . Very few neurological inpatients are even seen by a neurologist and, for patients with epilepsy at least, diagnostic errors by non-neurologists are common 8 . Colleagues in other specialities are clearly doing the work of neurologists, and this should be acknowledged.At present, almost every district general hospital (DGH) in the country is visited by a neurologist at least once a week, and a few have a consultant neurologist on site working more or less full time. But these neurologists tend not to be involved in acute admissions. Partly this is because of the lack of vital support structures: no allocated beds, no supporting neuroradiology and clinical neurophysiology, and no neurologically trained nurses, physiotherapists and other staff. But mainly it is because there are so few neurologists. Of course, regional neurology units take some patients, usually the most complicated cases and sometimes rather late for optimum care, but this is only a small proportion of the total. A few neurology departments -in Plymouth, Bath and Norwich -try to take all the acute neurology patients, but this creates a heavy workload and much stress for their staff. Current care for patients with acute neurological problems is thus unsatisfactory and must be improved.
Causes of the current situationThe specialty of neurology in the UK emerged from general medicine, but relatively early on most neurologists decided not to be involved in the acute medical take. Their time was more than taken up by outpatients, where even now the median waiting time for a non-urgent appointment is 18 weeks 9 , and by the investigation of inpatients. They worked extremely hard, but not in acute n...