Bangor Mail

Welsh Govt vows 12-month maximum wait for treatment

£15M BOOST FOR HEALTH BOARDS TO EASE POST-COVID WAITING LISTS

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NHS patients in Wales will wait no longer than 12 months for treatment, according to plans unveiled by the Welsh Government.

Health Minister Eluned Morgan said patients would not wait more than a year for treatment in most specialtie­s by spring 2025.

Health boards will be given an additional £15million a year over the next four years to cut waiting times, which have increased dramatical­ly since the Covid-19 pandemic began two years ago. Recent figures show this February there were 691,885 people waiting for treatment – a rise from 688,836 in January. Before the pandemic began in March 2020 there were 456,809 people on the waiting list.

The Welsh Government said it has now committed more than £1billion this Senedd term to help the NHS recover from the pandemic.

“We need a determined effort to ensure people waiting for appointmen­ts and treatment are seen as quickly as possible and in order of clinical priority,” Ms Morgan said.

“We are committing £1bn this Senedd term to help the NHS recover from the pandemic and to treat people as quickly as possible.

“Reducing waiting times will require new solutions, more equipment, new facilities and more staff to help diagnose people quickly as part of an effective and efficient planned care service.

“This plan sets out how we will transform planned care so the most urgent cases are prioritise­d.

“Waiting times and waiting lists have grown during the pandemic and will take a long time and a lot of hard work to do, but we are committed to working with our fantastic NHS to ensure no one waits longer than a year for treatment in most specialiti­es by spring 2025.”

Under the plans, the Welsh Government is aiming for 35% of all new appointmen­ts and 50% of follow-up appointmen­ts being delivered virtually in future. Another element is delivering more diagnostic tests outside hospitals and closer to people’s homes in primary and community care settings.

A website will also be created where patients can get the informatio­n and support to manage their own conditions.

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