NHS waiting list shoots to ANOTHER record high with 6.8million patients now in need of routine ops

NHS crisis laid bare: Waiting list shoots to ANOTHER record high with 6.8million patients now in need of routine ops and nearly 1,000 patients a day wait 12-plus hours in A&E… as top medics warn of an ‘awful’ winter ahead

  • NHS England data shows 6.8million patients were in the queue for routine hospital treatment in July 
  • Nearly 380,000 have waited for over one year, while 2,800 have been stuck in the backlog for at least two
  • Emergency unit data shows that three in 10 Britons were forced to wait longer than four hours in A&E
  • While ambulance waits recovered slightly last month, response times were still well above targets

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The NHS waiting list in England has spiraled to a new record, as medics warn crisis in the hospitals and emergency care will only get worse at the country moves into winter.

Official figures show 6.8million patients were in the queue for routine hospital treatment in July, equivalent to one in eight people.

Nearly 380,000 have been waiting for over one year, while more than 2,800 have been stuck in the backlog for at least two years — a list that was supposed to be cleared by July.

Separate emergency unit data shows that three in 10 Britons were forced to wait longer than four hours in A&E departments in August, while nearly one thousand waited for 12 hours per day.

While ambulance response times recovered slightly last month, the time taken for paramedics to arrive on the scene was still well above targets.

The Society for Acute Medicine warned there is no ‘quick fix’ and urged health chiefs to be frank about ‘just how awful this winter is going to be’ — with the public unable to bank on ‘high quality and timely care’. 

The NHS blames pressures in urgent care, the highest summer demand ever and problems in social care for the crisis. It pointed to its tests and checks waiting list, which has fallen for three months in a row.

The number of people on the queue for elective procedures, such as kip and knee replacements, jumped by 113,000 (1.7 per cent) in July, from a previous record of 6.7million in June.

Six in 10 (4.1million) have been waiting for four months, while 377,689 have been seeking treatment for at least one year and 2,885 have been waiting for two years.

The NHS insists that all but 170 of the 24-month waiters have either ‘opted to defer treatment’ — by declining an offer of an earlier appointment at another hospital — or are ‘very complex cases’ which would be unsafe to move to another hospital.

The NHS had a target of eliminating two-year waits by July, apart from those who choose to delay treatment and complex cases.

Its next deadline is to clear the number of people waiting more than 18 months by April 2023. One-year waits aren’t expected to be scrapped until March 2025.

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