Hundreds more patients join treatment waiting list at Croydon Health Services

Hundreds more patients were added to the waiting list for routine treatment at Croydon Health Services in December, figures show.
File photo dated 20/10/20 of staff on a hospital ward. More than two out of three NHS workers have considered quitting in the past six months, a new study suggests. Issue date: Thursday January 27, 2022.File photo dated 20/10/20 of staff on a hospital ward. More than two out of three NHS workers have considered quitting in the past six months, a new study suggests. Issue date: Thursday January 27, 2022.
File photo dated 20/10/20 of staff on a hospital ward. More than two out of three NHS workers have considered quitting in the past six months, a new study suggests. Issue date: Thursday January 27, 2022.

Hundreds more patients were added to the waiting list for routine treatment at Croydon Health Services in December, figures show.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid has set out plans to help the NHS recover from Covid-19, as the number of people on waiting lists reached record levels nationally – but he has said they will continue to rise for another two years.

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NHS England figures show 25,418 patients were waiting for non-urgent elective operations or treatment at Croydon Health Services NHS Trust at the end of December – up from 25,029 the month before.

December's figure was also 13% more than a year earlier, when there were 22,515 patients on the waiting list.

The median waiting time from referral to treatment was 9 weeks in December, compared to 8 weeks a year earlier.

The median – the middle number in a series – is used to ensure the figures are not skewed by extreme highs or lows.

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It meant 85% of patients started treatment within the NHS’s target time of 18 weeks – in line with last month.

Across England, 6.07 million people were waiting to start treatment at the end of December – up from 6 million in November, and the highest number since records began in August 2007.

Of them, 311,000 had been waiting longer than a year – 39% more than in December 2020.

Among those on the waiting list are people needing scans and tests, hip and knee operations, and cataract surgery.

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The Government and NHS England have set an ambition of eliminating all waits of more than a year by March 2025.

Separate NHS figures show Croydon Health Services narrowly breached its cancer waiting time target in December.

The NHS states 85% of cancer patients urgently referred by a GP should start treatment within 62 days.

But at the trust, just 84% of patients who received cancer treatment in December were seen within two months of an urgent referral.

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That was up from 73% in November, and in line with the previous December.

Trusts must also tell at least 75% of those urgently referred for a cancer check, whether they have the disease within 28 days.

The figures show Croydon Health Services fell below the target, with 73% of patients being told the outcome on time in December.

Measures announced by the Government to tackle issues within the health service, include prioritising diagnosis and treatment, increasing activity through dedicated surgical hubs, and hiring 15,000 more care workers by the end of March.

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the plan was the “biggest catch-up programme in the history of the health service backed by unprecedented funding”.

But health think tank The King’s Fund cast doubt over the plan.

Siva Anandaciva, chief analyst, said: “The Government has provided additional funding and agreed a new plan with the NHS to improve hospital waits, but the glaring omission remains a strategy to ensure there are enough staff to make shorter waits a reality.”

NHS national medical director Professor Stephen Powis said: “While pressures remain for our staff, with the highest number of life-threatening ambulance callouts and 111 calls for the month of January, NHS staff are committed to bringing down the backlog, and the clear plan published this week will help increase the number of checks, tests and treatment provided for patients.”