Worst-ever NHS waiting times are costing lives, say doctors’ leaders
Nearly 20,000 people a day are waiting at least four hours in A&E amid a dramatic collapse in NHS performance.
Patients are dying avoidably as record numbers spend at least 12 hours stuck on a trolley in hospital corridors waiting for a bed to become available, doctors’ leaders say. Waiting times are worse than ever across almost all measures, including cancer and planned surgery, according to monthly NHS England performance statistics.
The rise in numbers waiting for those services — such as hip replacements, MRI scans and cataract surgery — shows no sign of slowing and includes 401,537 patients waiting for over a year, often in pain.
A crisis in emergency care means that only 69 per cent of patients attending A&E in October were seen within the four-hour target, the worst figure ever. A record 43,792 people — about 1,400 a day — waited for at least 12 hours. Many spend that time on trolleys waiting for a bed.
Heart attack and stroke victims are waiting more than an hour on average for an ambulance. with some dying as a result, and the NHS is nowhere near the response time targets seen as essential to saving lives.
NHS leaders blamed the poor performance on a “tripledemic” of Covid, flu and pressures on emergency services; October was the busiest month on record for A&E attendances, at 2.1 million.
The ongoing deterioration of the health service’s ability to provide basic timely care will fuel debates over whether the NHS should be given extra funding as it faces a £7 billion shortfall next year.
Waiting times are expected to get worse this winter, when up to a million NHS staff including nurses walk out in an unprecedented wave of strikes.
Professor Sir Stephen Powis, medical director of NHS England, said: “There is no doubt October has been a challenging month for staff who are now facing a tripledemic of Covid, flu and record pressure on emergency services, with more people attending A&E or requiring the most urgent ambulance callout than any other October.
“Pressure on emergency services remains high as a result of more than 13,000 beds taken up each day by people who no longer need to be in hospital. But staff have kept their foot on the accelerator to get the backlog down with 18-month waiters down by three fifths on last year.
“We have always said the overall waiting list would rise as more patients come forward, and with pressures on staff set to increase over the winter months the NHS has a plan – including a new falls service, 24/7 war rooms and extra beds and call handlers.”
The government and NHS have set a target of eliminating all waits of a year or longer by March 2025, but many health leaders say this will be impossible without action to fill the service’s 132,000 vacancies.
Of the 7.1 million waiting to start hospital treatment at the end of September, 401,537 people in England had been waiting for more than 52 weeks. This is the equivalent of about one in 18 people on the waiting list and is up from 292,138 this time last year and 1,613 in February 2020, before the pandemic.
There has been an alarming jump in 12-hour A&E waits in England; 43,792 people waited longer than that in October, up 34 per cent from 32,776. This is by far the highest figure since records began and is up from 1,268 this time two years ago. The average ambulance response time to Category 2 emergencies such as strokes and heart attacks was 61 minutes; the target is 18.
In October more than 32,000 999 callers with emergencies including suspected stroke had to wait two hours for an ambulance to arrive.
Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, said: “NHS staff are slogging their guts out but there simply aren’t enough of them. Labour will ensure patients are treated on time again. We will train a new generation of doctors and nurses, paid for by abolishing the non-dom tax status.”
Dr Tim Cooksley, president of the Society for Acute Medicine, said: “Standards are at an unacceptably poor level for both patients and staff with an expectation that this will deteriorate further over the winter months.
“All parts of the NHS are unquestionably struggling. Prolonged waits for ambulances, long stays in emergency departments and acute medical units, longer periods for patients in hospitals waiting for social care and increased waiting on elective lists with large numbers of cancellations due to lack of beds continue to dominate the picture.
“In the short term there needs to be some honest discussions regarding what the NHS can deliver over the next few months . . . We are seeing a new definition of what crisis means.”
The proportion of cancer patients in England who saw a specialist within two weeks of being referred urgently by their GP has dropped to its lowest level on record. In September 72.6 per cent of patients in England had a first consultant appointment within two weeks against a 93 per cent target, according to provisional figures.
Only 67.2 per cent of patients urgently referred for suspected cancer were diagnosed or had cancer ruled out within 28 days, down from 69.5 per cent the previous month and the second-worst performance in records going back to April 2021.
Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of Cancer Research UK, said: “Behind today’s numbers are real people affected by cancer and facing unacceptably long waits for diagnosis and treatment during what is already an incredibly anxious time — real people who continue to be promised better by successive health secretaries, but who nonetheless continue to be let down.”
Professor Pat Price, co-founder of the #CatchUpWithCancer campaign, said: “Today’s figures show a worsening cancer catastrophe. This is a crisis, services are at breaking point. In just three months, over 17,000 cancer patients have missed life-saving cancer treatment targets. These are the worst figures on record.”
