NHS waiting-list backlog will take years to clear
The waiting list for hospital treatment will not start falling for two years, ministers say, despite unveiling a plan to tackle England's backlog in care.
Six million people are on a waiting list – one in nine of the population.
But Health Secretary Sajid Javid said this number would probably increase, with demand expected to rise now Covid pressure was easing.
He also set out plans to reduce waiting times for cancer treatment.
These include a 28-day target for cancer diagnosis by March 2024, which should have been introduced last year but was delayed by the pandemic.
The proportion of cancer patients starting treatment within 62 days would return to its pre-pandemic level by March 2023, Mr Javid said, although this would still leave it some way short of the 85% target.
Waiting times would be cut by a 30% rise in the NHS's capacity for treatment, he said.
Crucial to this will be the establishment of a network of 160 community diagnostic centres along with surgical hubs focused on high-volume routine surgery away from major hospital sites – to increase efficiency and reduce the chance of emergency cases leading to cancellations.
Extra investment of £8bn over the next three years, funded through a national-insurance rise, will pay for these new facilities.
To free up staff time, follow-up appointments would be arranged on a case-by-case basis, rather than for all patients automatically, Mr Javid said.
And a new online service, My Planned Care, will inform patients about waiting times and how to prepare for treatment.
The plan would not just "reset" the NHS to where it had been before Covid, Mr Javid said, but build on what had been learned and make it "fit for the future".
"Just as we came together to tackle the virus, now we must come together in a new national mission to fight what the virus has brought with it," he said.
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How is the NHS in your area coping this winter?
Enter a postcode to find out. Eg ‘M50 2EQ’
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About the data
About the data
Ambulance queues
When patients arrive at hospital by ambulance they should be handed over within 15 minutes. This data shows the proportion of ambulance patients who waited 30 minutes or more, in the week shown. It comes from daily situation reports which are published weekly during the winter in England. As this is fast-turnaround data, the NHS says only minimal validation can be carried out but it is considered fit for purpose.
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland do not publish ambulance queue data.
A&E waits
Patients at A&E should be seen within four hours of arrival. This data shows the proportion of patients attending A&E who waited longer than four hours to be treated, discharged or admitted.
This data is published monthly for England and Wales and weekly for Scotland. Northern Ireland publishes its data quarterly and Winter 2021 is not yet available.
Bed waits and occupancy
If a patient at A&E needs to be admitted, the wait from decision to admit to being given a bed on a ward is recorded in England. The bed waits figure is the proportion of patients admitted via A&E who waited longer than four hours for a ward bed.
In Wales, bed wait data is not published, so the figure shown is the occupancy level in general and acute beds. Scotland and Northern Ireland do not publish bed wait or bed occupancy data.
NHS trusts and boards
Data for England is show by NHS trust, where the trust includes at least one hospital with a Type 1 A&E department. Type 1 means a consultant-led 24 hour A&E service with full resuscitation facilities.
When you enter a postcode for a location in England you will be shown a list of NHS trusts in your area. They will not necessarily be in order of your closest hospital as some trusts have more than one hospital. Data for Wales and Scotland are shown by NHS board.
Comparative data from two years ago is shown where available. However, where trusts have merged there is no like-for-like comparison to show. Bed occupancy data in Wales only goes back to April 2020.
If you can't see the look-up, click here.
The numbers being referred for treatment had dropped by about 10 million during the pandemic, Mr Javid said.
People are thought to have been deterred from seeking help for non-urgent care, everything from knee and hip surgery to treatment for sight problems and joint pain.
And the health secretary said the NHS was working on the basis half of these "missing patients" could now come forward.
He also promised to eliminate waits of over a year by 2025.
Currently more than 300,000 people have waited this long, up from 1,600 before Covid hit.
There was no promise to meet the target of seeing 92% of patients within 18 weeks, however, last achieved in 2016.
'Biggest challenge'
NHS England chief executive Amanda Pritchard said tackling the backlog would take time and "cannot happen overnight" but promised the health service would apply the same "can-do" spirit it had throughout the pandemic.
Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting accused the Tories of "mismanagement" of the NHS, pointing out performance had been declining before the pandemic.
And he said there was nothing in the health secretary's plan about tackling the "single biggest challenge" facing the NHS – the lack of staff.
"There are 93,000 staffing vacancies in the NHS today," Mr Streeting said.
"It is understaffed, overworked – and if he's not careful, he will lose more people than he is able to recruit."
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