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Hospitals issue warning about key NHS waiting list target as winter crisis looms

Children are being ‘let down’ amid huge waiting lists health chiefs have warned

Rebecca Thomas,Jane Kirby
Tuesday 12 November 2024 04:09 EST
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The government will not meet its ambition of getting NHS waiting times down to 18 weeks without investing in primary care, children’s services and mental health, NHS leaders have warned.

Healthcare chiefs also warned there is a “fundamental mismatch” between demand for services and what the NHS is able to do.

The boss of a trust that provides community and mental health services warned children are being “let down” amid “enormous” waiting lists.

“It’s really disappointing to see how absent children are, first of all in terms of policy, and I couldn’t account more strongly the extent to which I think they are being let down collectively,

“Waiting lists are enormous and are simply growing as things stand...there is a fundamental mismatch between demand and capacity as things stand,” they said.

The warnings come after the Labour government outlined its ambition to ensure 92 per cent of patients receive care within 18 weeks within the next five years. The target was first introduced under Tony Blair’s government and it was last hit in February 2016.

To meet the target, it has pledged to deliver an extra two million NHS appointments a year.

Currently, the waiting list stands at 7.6 million, with the latest figures showing some 282,664 people in England had been waiting more than a year to start routine hospital treatment at the end of August.

The poll found almost three-quarters of trust leaders, 71 per cent, and all bosses from acute specialist and ambulance trusts, think it is unlikely or very unlikely that the NHS can meet 18 weeks over the next five years.

The boss of one NHS trust said: “The government have got the most focus on getting back to 18 weeks, which is the hardest standard to meet of all.

“If you think, there were seven million people on a waiting list, and as fast as you take them off, currently, we’re putting more people on.

“So that is a huge numbers game that’s going to cost a huge amount of money, unless you can do something to arrest the increase of people going on to waiting lists.

“If you don’t create the capacity in primary care, in children’s services, in mental health, you can’t do the management of people properly in the community and stop them getting so acutely unwell.”

Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, said: “There will be progress, but can trust leaders, with hand on heart, say that they’re going to meet that 18-week standard? I think that is really difficult and challenging to predict.”

The survey also found 79 per cent of trust leaders are either worried or very worried about meeting demand for services over the next year, a similar proportion to 12 months ago but higher than the 61 per cent reported before the pandemic.

It comes as a report from the Institute Fiscal Studies claimed NHS performance “remains worse” than prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, although “hospital activity has increased substantially over the last year”.

Last month, the government said its 10-year plan for the health service will include shifting more care from hospitals into the community.

Almost all, 98 per cent, trust leaders supported the policy change, although 72 per cent said they are either worried or very worried about whether sufficient investment is being made in public health and sickness prevention in their local area.

In her Budget, Chancellor Rachel Reeves described the £22.6bn increase in the day-to-day health budget as a “down payment” on the 10-year plan.

She also insisted it will “bring waiting lists down more quickly” and towards the 18-week target.

However, Ms Cordery said the funding “needs to cover significant costs”, such as pay rises.

“In terms of the Budget allocation, what we do know is that much of it is already allocated. And I think that’s going to be one of the challenges,” she said.

“The big 22-plus billion pounds is across two years and then, when you drill into that, it needs to cover significant costs that are already allocated.

“So that includes pay rises, which are going to eat into that significantly.

“In terms of those allocations, I think they’re big numbers, they’re welcome numbers, but, in terms of outgoings already slated, we know that they’re not going to go that far.”

One trust leader described the “real tough financial conditions of our local government partners” and warned the Budget will add to problems for some services.

They added: “Given that they have to balance their books every year, because it’s their statutory responsibility, they are finding it really challenging, and I think the new Budget will be even harder for them, especially if care homes and domiciled agencies have to incur the NI costs that they have at the moment – that’s only going to increase problems in the sector.”

The Department for Health and Social Care was approached for comment.

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