The Scotsman

One in five hit as NHS waiting times get longer

● Labour: Patients are paying the price of ‘separation obsession’

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

Almost one in five NHS patients are waiting longer than the target of 12 weeks to be treated in hospital, as new figures show waiting times for treatment and tests have got worse over the last year.

The proportion of patients waiting longer than the legally binding Treatment Time Guarantee has more than doubled in the past year, with 82.1 per cent being treated within 12 weeks in the first three months of this year, against 92.7 per cent in 2016.

Health secretary Shona Robison has promised £50 million investment to reduce waiting times. But opponents accused the Scottish Government of being distracted by a second independen­ce referendum.

Waiting times for hospital treatments and tests on the NHS have got worse over the past year, leading to accusation­s that the Scottish Government is being distracted by calls for a second independen­ce referendum.

New figures have revealed nearly one in five NHS patients are waiting longer than the target of 12 weeks to be treated in hospital.

The proportion of patients waiting longer than the legally binding Treatment Time Guarantee has more than doubled in the past year, with 82.1 per cent receiving being treated within 12 weeks in the first three months of this year, compared with 92.7 per cent in the same period in 2016.

Health Secretary Shona Robison responded with a promise of £50 million investment to reduce waiting times.

The latest set of figures for NHS Scotland also reveal that in March, 84.2 per cent of patients had their treatment start within 18 weeks of being referred, down three points on the same time last year.

NHS Scotland has missed the target of 90 per cent since June 2014. Just four out of 14 individual health boards are meeting the required standard.

The proportion of patients waiting less than six weeks for diagnostic tests also fell, from 94.6 per cent in the three months to 31 March 2016, to 86.7 per cent in the first three months of 2017.

Scottish Conservati­ve health spokesman Donald Cameron said: “These figures reveal that the SNP are continuing to let down patients, while showing a complete lack of urgency when it comes to sorting out the blatantly obvious problems which beset the NHS in Scotland.

“People are growing ever more frustrated that, instead of doing everything in their power to address these abysmal figures, the SNP has constantly brushed statistics aside and opted to push for an unwanted independen­ce referendum instead.”

Labour health spokesman Anas Sarwar said patients were paying the price of the SNP’S “separation obsession”.

Mr Sarwar said: “The SNP is breaking its own laws for thousands of patients every month because Nicola Sturgeon and Health Secretary Shona Robison only care about independen­ce, not patients and our hard-working NHS staff.”

Liberal Democrat health spokesman Alex Cole-hamilton MSP said: “On the day that Nicola Sturgeon launches the SNP manifesto, she should be personally apologisin­g to the tens of thousands of patients who have waited longer than promised because of her government’s obsession with independen­ce.”

Ms Robison said NHS Scotland had cut waiting lists for outpatient consultati­ons by almost a fifth in the first quarter of this year, and would direct additional funds received through the Barnett Formula in the Budget towards cutting waiting times for diagnostic tests and treatment.

She said: “While it is encouragin­g to see an improvemen­t in outpatient performanc­e, I absolutely recognise the need to do more to reduce waiting times – particular­ly when it comes to the 12-week Treatment Time Guarantee for inpatient and day cases.”

“The SNP are continuing to let down patients, while showing a lack of urgency when it comes to sorting out the problems which beset the NHS”

DONALD CAMERON

 ??  ?? 0 Targets are being missed on waiting times for diagnostic tests
0 Targets are being missed on waiting times for diagnostic tests

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom