Obese hospital patients kept on ground floor ‘over fears of collapsing concrete’

An MP has recalled how obese hospital patients were treated on the ground floor over fears they could collapse the roof.

A taped off section inside Parks Primary School in Leicester which has been affected with sub standard reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac). More than 100 schools, nurseries and colleges in England have been told by the Government to close classrooms and other buildings that contain an aerated concrete that is prone to collapse. Picture date: Friday September 1, 2023. (Photo by Jacob King/PA Images via Getty Images)
Parks Primary School in Leicester has been affected with sub standard reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac). (Getty)

An MP committee chairwoman has recalled how obese hospital patients were treated on the ground floor over fears they could collapse the roof as the fallout from the Raac crisis continues.

The Department for Education (DoE) has now confirmed 156 schools in England have a type of potentially dangerous concrete in their buildings called autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC).

Of those schools, 52 were deemed a critical risk and already have safety measures in place.

But chairwoman of Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee Dame Meg Hillier warned Raac is just “the tip of the iceberg” of a crumbling school estate, describing the state of some public buildings as “jaw-dropping”.

The Labour MP wrote in the Times: "Heavy patients must be treated on the ground floor because the combined weight with equipment is too heavy to be safe. Roof failure is a daily risk.”

Raac is thought to be present in buildings at 34 hospitals across England, and the government has pledged seven of the worst affected will be replaced by 2030.

Read more: School concrete closures list: Where have buildings been shut?

Damage inside Parks Primary School in Leicester which has been affected with sub standard reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac). More than 100 schools, nurseries and colleges in England have been told by the Government to close classrooms and other buildings that contain an aerated concrete that is prone to collapse. Picture date: Friday September 1, 2023. (Photo by Jacob King/PA Images via Getty Images)
Damage inside Parks Primary School in Leicester. (Getty)
A taped off section inside Parks Primary School in Leicester which has been affected with sub standard reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac). More than 100 schools, nurseries and colleges in England have been told by the Government to close classrooms and other buildings that contain an aerated concrete that is prone to collapse. Picture date: Friday September 1, 2023. (Photo by Jacob King/PA Images via Getty Images)
A taped off section inside Parks Primary School. (Getty)

It comes after 104 schools and colleges were told by the DoE to partially or fully shut buildings just as pupils prepare to return after the summer holidays.

Though not confirmed, it is estimated that around 24 schools in England have been told to close entirely because of the presence of Raac and schools minister Nick Gibb has admitted more could be asked to shut classrooms.

Gibb said that a collapse of a beam that had been considered safe over the summer sparked an urgent rethink on whether buildings with the aerated concrete could remain open.

He insisted schools were contacting affected families and told the BBC’s Today programme “we will publish a list”, but only once they are in a “stable place”.

Read more: School concrete closures: Expert says social housing could also be at risk

But the problem could be far wider, with other buildings at risk of sudden collapse if Raac is not removed, specialists said.

Dame Meg questioned “why it has been left to deteriorate for so long” while millions of pounds are being spent on temporary measures to mitigate the risk.

“In both schools and hospitals, there hasn’t been enough money going into buildings and equipment,” she told Times Radio.

She said the costs of working around the problem – by using props to support existing structures and conducting surveys on Raac-affected areas – were “eye-watering and wasteful”.

Watch: Government comes under pressure over RAAC concrete crisis

Engineers have warned that the problem could be far wider, with hospitals, prisons, courts and offices potentially at risk due to the use of Raac up to the mid-1990s.

Labour has called for an “urgent audit” to identify the risk of the concrete across the public sector estate, while the Liberal Democrats said the public and NHS staff need “urgent clarity” over whether hospital wards and buildings could be forced to close.

Shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell said the crisis would damage the education of children at a primary school in a deprived area of her constituency which has been forced to close its hall.

“These are some of the poorest, less ready-for-school children that we have in this country and they really need their schools to be open,” the Manchester Central MP told BBC Breakfast.