A mum-of-two has claimed she was forced to wait on a hard chair in the A&E for three days after breaking her ankle.
Leah Rees, 26, was rushed to The Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran, Wales on January 16 after breaking her ankle while out with friends.
After initially being triaged, given an X-ray and a leg cast, she says she was told to stay in the NHS emergency department and wait for a bed to open up on a ward, WalesOnline reports.
However, she claims she spent three days on an "uncomfortable" chair in the unit and she was told to not eat or drink in case she needed an urgent ankle operation.
She said: "I was in excruciating pain, I was given no rest for my leg or any pillows, and I was absolutely starving because I was nil by mouth. I couldn't even walk to go to the toilet.
"I just felt like I was ignored for three days."
Leah, who works as a healthcare assistant in the Royal Gwent Hospital in Newport, claimed when she was finally seen by a doctor he said the wrong cast had been put on her which led to her leg swelling up.
She said: "The doctor couldn't believe the tightness of the cast. He said that the plaster should have never been put on as I was at risk of blood clots," she added.
"They then took the cast off, discharged me from the hospital, and said I'd undergo my operation at St Woolos Hospital in the next few days. I'd stayed at the hospital for three days for no reason. I could have been at home in bed.
"They advised me to get a taxi home with a broken ankle and nothing really to support it. I was just shocked at the lack of care."
Leah says she also waited three hours for the ambulance to arrive.
She says she was "freezing" during her stay as she only had a fleece to keep her warm.
She said: "I was just crying to go home. I felt like discharging myself. I've got two little girls and my mum has had to take a week off work to look after them."
Leah is now set to undergo an operation at St Woolos Hospital, Newport, where metal pins and plates are to be put in place in her ankle.
A spokesman for Aneurin Bevan University Health Board told the Mirror: "We are sorry that Ms Rees was not happy with the care that she received and we have been in contact with her to discuss her treatment plan and any concerns regarding our services.
"Our hospital services have remained extremely busy in recent weeks and months due to large amounts of very poorly people, Covid-19 restrictions, and staff shortages.
"When patients arrive at our emergency department they are initially assessed by a nurse and their care is prioritised according to the seriousness of their condition with those patients with life-threatening illnesses and injuries seen first.
"Unfortunately this means that patients with less serious conditions are likely to face longer waits at busy times. We apologise for any distress and discomfort such delays cause."