Struggling A&E departments in England are to be given a £500m Government bailout to help relieve pressure over the winter months.
The funding, announced by Prime Minister David Cameron, will be spread over the next two years to prepare the service for winter and will include £15m for the troubled 111 phone service.
The emergency care system has come under intense pressure, partly due to a rise in the number of people attending A&E.
Over one million more people attend the departments than three years ago.
David Cameron on a hospital visit in Salford on ThursdaySome experts have blamed issues in primary care, saying patients feel they have nowhere to turn once GP surgeries are closed.
Major problems with the new 111 service for non-urgent care are also thought to have impacted on A&E.
Last month, MPs on the Health Select Committee said plans to tackle problems were not robust enough.
The new funding is aimed at A&E departments identified as being under the most pressure and will be targeted at "pinch points" in local services.
Hospitals have already put forward proposals aimed at improving how the service works, including taking into account how other services feed into it.
One way of relieving pressure could be to minimise A&E attendances and hospital admissions from care homes by appointing hospital specialists in charge of joining up services for the elderly.
Consultants may also be called upon to review patients arriving by ambulance at A&E so that a senior level decision is taken on what care is needed at the earliest opportunity.
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt says the money will help units over winterMr Cameron said: "With over a million more people visiting A&E in the last three years, services and staff can find themselves under pressure during the busier winter period.
"While A&E departments are performing well this summer and at a level we would expect for this time of year, I want the NHS to take action now to prepare for the coming winter.
"The additional funding will go to hospitals where the pressure will be greatest, with a focus on practical measures that relieve pinch points in local services."
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said: "This £500m will help A&E departments to prepare for winter and give patients confidence that they can quickly access safe and reliable emergency care."
A spokesman for the British Medical Association (BMA) said: "It is right that the Government is finally listening to the concerns of doctors and patients but, at a time when they are demanding cuts of £20bn across the NHS, this is nothing more than papering over the cracks.
"It is recognition that their austerity programme has hospitals facing ever increasing demands with diminishing resources."
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