South Wales Evening Post

New theatres aim to clear backlogs

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

OPERATING theatres planned in Swansea Bay could clear some waiting list backlogs in two to three years, a health board report has said.

Four theatres for planned orthopaedi­c procedures such as hip and knee replacemen­ts – plus some spinal surgery – are coming to Neath Port Talbot Hospital, while an extra theatre to deal with eye disorders will be created at Singleton Hospital, Sketty.

Swansea Bay University Health Board progressed the proposals at a meeting in September and has now secured funding from the Welsh Government. Board members are expected to advance the plans further at a meeting on Thursday.

Orthopaedi­cs and ophthalmol­ogy account for a quarter of the health board’s entire waiting list.

The “modular” operating theatres at Neath Port Talbot Hospital are expected to be up and running in 2022-23.

The target date for the installati­on of the operating theatre at Singleton Hospital is the current financial year.

The Welsh Government has provided £8.1 million to cover the cost of the theatres and the equipment they will need.

A report before the health board said that once operationa­l, the extra ophthalmol­ogy capacity should enable waiting lists to be cleared in two years, while the orthopaedi­c backlog should be dealt with in two to three years.

Orthopaedi­c waits, it said, were “unacceptab­le” before the Covid crisis hit in March 2020 and were now even worse. “Currently, elective orthopaedi­c activity within Swansea Bay and spinal theatre access is severely limited,” it added.

Speaking at a meeting in September, health board chief executive Mark Hackett said: “Fundamenta­lly our patients need this service. The history to this is we’ve never had sufficient orthopaedi­c capacity to deal with the demands that this client group ask of us.”

A separate report which will be discussed at the November 25 meeting said there were 36,420 patients in Swansea and Neath Port Talbot waiting more than 36 weeks for planned care, as of October.

The number has been rising steadily and some patients have been waiting more than two years.

Emergency admissions have also been increasing in Swansea Bay, but they fell slightly to 10,737 in October.

Also in October there were 648 ambulance handovers at hospitals which took more than an hour – nearly double the 355 last October.

Other figures include a marked drop in the proportion of life-threatenin­g calls which ambulance paramedics were able to attend within eight minutes.

The target proportion for such calls is 65%, but in October it fell to 43.6%.

On the plus side, there were 238 patients who were medically fit for discharge last month but still occupying a hospital bed – normally because a package of care was not available – compared to 272 in September.

 ?? DAVID JONES ?? New operating theatres planned in Swansea Bay could clear some waiting list backlogs in two to three years.
DAVID JONES New operating theatres planned in Swansea Bay could clear some waiting list backlogs in two to three years.

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