NHS cancer services plunged deeper into crisis this winter, BMA analysis reveals
Doctors’ leaders have warned that thousands of cancer patients were left waiting weeks for treatment this winter according to the NHS’s own data. New BMA analysis also revealed that other key parts of hospital care in England missed critical targets by the largest margin on record.
Writing separately for the BMA, an anonymous emergency care doctor describes wards “bursting with patients awaiting beds” and how “when a critically ill patient arrives now I’m not sure where I’ll put them.”
The new BMA analysis, NHS Pressures – Winter 2018/19; A Hidden Crisis, uses NHS England figures to examine the performance of the NHS during recent winters and over the long term. Key findings include:
Cancer Treatment Services
- Almost a quarter of cancer patients had to wait more than two months for their first treatment after an urgent referral by a GP, with only 76.2 per cent being seen within the 62 days; well below the 85 per cent target. This is the worst performance on record. Overall, 6,240 people were waiting beyond the target, a 39 per cent rise on last year.
- The number of people waiting to see a cancer specialist for more than 21 days rose to a historic high of 8,820, up from 5,099 last winter, an increase of 73 per cent.
- Between January and February 2019, the NHS failed to meet its target of 93 per cent of patients being seen by a cancer specialist within two weeks of referral for the first time in a winter period, registering 92.5 per cent. The NHS has now missed the two-week target for nine of the last twelve months.
- The number of patients needing help rose by 17 per cent.
- Overall, more than a third (36 per cent) of NHS providers missed the two-week target in January 2019, up 15 percentage points on the same period last year.
Emergency Care
- A record 6.2 million patients visited major emergency care departments this winter.
- Almost one in four patients were left waiting more than four hours to be seen at major emergency care units and 214,000 were left on trolleys waiting more than four hours to be seen after being admitted. This is the second worst performance quarter on record.
- Overall, 85.1 per cent of patients were seen within the four-hour target, only 0.1 per cent better than the worst figures on record last winter.
- February 2019 was the single worst month since records began with only 75.7 per cent of patients at major accident and emergency departments being seen within the required target time.
Hospital Care
- The total number of patients waiting for operations and further care rose to a record 4.3 million in February 2019 with the average wait for an operation now at close to seven weeks.
- Between 3 December 2018 and 3 March 2019, 93 per cent of beds in the NHS were occupied, only marginally down from last year. The NHS itself has said that bed occupancy above 92 per cent results in a serious negative impact on patient care.
BMA Council Chair, Dr Chaand Nagpaul, said:
BMA Patient Liaison Group Chair, Amanda Cool, said:
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