@Phaedra Only just stumbled across this, but have to respond re your comment about A&E and the Police. One of my daughters is a response Police Officer. She can spend virtually an entire shift with a prisoner waiting for them to be checked in A&E (if an airbag has been deployed they have to have them checked over before taking them to custody – daft I know). Substantial delays with a drink driver at A&E can mean that someone who has caused an accident and been arrested at the scene may well blow just under the limit by the time that they eventually provide the evidential breath sample at the custody suite many hours later. I’m sure that she (and her colleagues) would love to be given some priority so that they can get on with Policing, which the great British public want them to do, but they are woefully under resourced and officers are leaving in droves as the pressure is immense. Having them waiting with someone in A&E for a shift is not what anyone wants them to do but in our local hospitals they wait along with everyone else.