Caernarfon Herald

Welsh Govt gives £20m to help Betsi cut waiting lists

... BUT OPPOSITION SAYS EXTRA CASH IS ‘DROP IN THE OCEAN’ WITH 40,000 PATIENTS WAITING OVER A YEAR

- Jez Hemming

WELSH Government has handed Betsi Cadwaladr health board £20m to help cut patient lists, with more than 40,000 people waiting in excess of a year for treatment.

The cash will be used to fund extra clinics at weekends, send some patients to English hospitals and to pay the private sector to treat them, said Professor Arpan Guha, the board’s acting medical director.

The cash, announced by new health and social care minister Eluned Morgan, is the health board’s share of £100m given to boards across Wales to try to get waiting lists reduced.

Professor Guha said many services had recommence­d from April this year.

He added: “Due to social distancing and infection control measures, some services remain at a lower capacity than previously.

“The £20m funding from Welsh Government will help us to undertake further initiative­s to treat longer waiting patients with a particular focus on those who have waited over a year for their procedure.

“We are engaging with clinical teams to undertake extra activity during the evenings and weekends and using the independen­t sector within North Wales and the north-west of England.”

Conservati­ve MS for Clwyd West Darren Millar called the £20m “a drop in the ocean and is at least £2.2 million short”.

Plaid Cymru’s Rhun ap Iorwerth MS said returning to a “prepandemi­c normal” wasn’t good enough and called for an “ambitious recovery plan, which puts NHS Wales in a better position than at the start of the pandemic”.

The Royal College of Surgeons said the “backlog must be a priority for the new Health Minister and Welsh Government”.

Mr Richard Johnson, director in Wales of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, said: “We have been calling on Welsh Government and NHS Wales to implement Covid ‘light’ sites or the ‘surgical hub’ model across Wales, to help reduce elective waiting times and ensure surgical patients can be treated safely. This is the best way we can keep treating people who need operations, regardless of future pandemics and winter pressures. However, it requires being open to doing things differentl­y.”

BMA Cymru Wales chair Dr David Bailey said he “welcomed” the news but called it “the tip of the iceberg” and called for “proper recognitio­n” and “adequate rest facilities for his members”.

He added: “We want to be clear treating such a significan­t number of patients (17% of the population and rising) will take years and the pandemic will leave a lasting legacy requiring unpreceden­ted levels of funding for NHS care in Wales.”

Some specialiti­es where Betsi Cadwaladr patients have been

waiting longest are orthopaedi­cs, general surgery, urology, ophthalmol­ogy and gynaecolog­y. Patients will be prioritise­d on clinical need rather than how long they’ve been waiting, said the board.

In March Betsi’s new CEO, Jo Whitehead, revealed she wanted temporary units to help drive down the backlog of patients.

She said: “We are having discussion­s about mobile facilities which we are looking at dropping into our acute sites. That additional physical theatre, bed and diagnostic capacity will help us to try and catch up on our backlog. We’re expecting those temporary facilities to be available during the summer months.”

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 ??  ?? ● Prof Arpan Guha (left), Betsi acting executive medical director, said the funding would focus on those waiting more than a year for treatment; Darren Millar MS, right, said the cash was well short of what was needed
● Prof Arpan Guha (left), Betsi acting executive medical director, said the funding would focus on those waiting more than a year for treatment; Darren Millar MS, right, said the cash was well short of what was needed

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