NHS England achieved the main 18 weeks target in January, but the gap is closing and it’s turning into a nail biter as the election approaches.

In its own inimitable, haphazard, short termist way, NHS England has been throwing plenty of effort at 18 week waits in the run-up to the general election.

The right ingredients are there:

  • the perverse admitted and non-admitted targets have been waived;
  • extra money has been found to pay for extra capacity; and
  • there has been a focus on reducing the total list size and treating long waiters.

But (to continue with the cooking analogy) the preparation is lacking:

  • the amnesties have been on off on again;
  • the extra money and capacity has been short term, short notice, and high cost; and
  • the reductions in list size have been target driven and likely to include dollops of one-off validation and the cherry picking of minor ops.

What the NHS really needs is enough baseline capacity to slightly exceed demand, a well planned and fairly lengthy one-off effort to bring every waiting list down to size, and to treat all patients in a safe and fair order without the encumbrance of perverse targets.

Do all that, and waiting times will take care of themselves.

A matter of time

Perhaps the next government will do the job properly - we can always hope.

As things stand, the waiting list is growing long term, and a longer queue means longer waits. So it is only a matter of time before the main 18 weeks target (the “incomplete pathways” one) is breached nationally.

It might happen before the election, or it might happen after; we’ll find out when the February figures are released in April.

It’s going to be a close run thing.

‘Perhaps the next government will do the job properly’

At the end of January, 92.6 per cent of the waiting list had waited less than 18 weeks - the lowest since the 92 per cent target was first achieved in early 2012.

If you include non-reporting trusts, the real figure was probably just 92.3 per cent.

When February’s figures come out, it is even possible that the target might be achieved officially, but not if non-reporting trusts are added back in. Now there’s a recipe for arguments across the dispatch box.

In the following analysis, all figures come from NHS England. If you have a national statistic that you’d like to check up on, you can download our Gooroo NHS waiting times fact checker.

England-wide picture

Royal Berkshire FT have started reporting their waiting list data again which is very welcome, but the other eight non-reporters are still absent.

The last reported data for the non-reporting trusts shows that they were failing the main “incomplete pathways” target overall, so if you add them back into the official figures then national performance narrows from 92.6 per cent to just 92.3 per cent (against a target of 92 per cent).

00_Non_reporting_Trusts

Non-reporting trusts are not included in the waiting list charts below. 

If they were, then the total waiting list size would remain almost constant during January (3,137,747 at the end of January, compared with 3,174,914 at the end of December). 

I estimate that the admitted patient target is unsustainable long term when the waiting list is over about 3 million, and the main incomplete pathways target is unsustainable over about 3.3 million.

01_HSJ_Waiting_list_in_England

Admissions per working day were lower than last January, but close to the previous two Januaries. So there is little sign of the extra waiting list money resulting in extra admissions.

The well publicised pressures on emergency admissions will not have made elective admissions any easier.

02_HSJ_Admissions_per_working_day

The long waits picture is hard to gauge because there are so many non-reporting trusts. Of the 441 reported one year waits, some 217 were in orthopaedics at North Bristol Trust.

03_HSJ_Long_waiters_still_on_the_waiting_list

The next chart shows both the size of the problem (the dark line) and the NHS’s response to it within the constraints of the perverse targets (the lighter lines).

The dark line shows that the waiting list has been edging ever closer to breaching the 18 week target, and is likely to breach in the next few months.

Why? Well, long waits are a function of two things: the length of the queue, and the order in which patients are treated.

Queue jumping

Either can cause long waits, and both need to be under control to sustain short waits. So let’s look at those two things in turn.

The queue has been growing fairly rapidly for the last two years, and (in the absence of a long term plan for more baseline capacity) the recent flurry of waiting list initiatives has at best only paused that growth.

‘Long term growth is the reason why an eventual breach is almost certain’

This long term growth is the reason why an eventual breach is almost certain.

Turning now to the order in which patients are treated, ideally hospitals would treat urgent patients quickly, and the rest on a broadly first come first served basis (i.e. starting with the longest waiters).

But the perverse admitted and non-admitted targets restrict hospitals from treating their long waiting patients, requiring them to devote most of their capacity to treating short waiting patients instead.

This causes queue jumping and makes waiting times worse.

In the past several months, there has been a series of partial amnesties on these two perverse targets.

So the NHS has had greater freedom to treat long waiting patients, and doing so has caused the “failure” (very much in inverted commas) of the admitted and non-admitted targets that you see in the lighter lines below.

The amnesties have certainly helped to control long waits, and they have allowed waiting lists to be managed more fairly than before. But when the queue is growing long term, a breach of the main target is still inevitable even if it happens a bit later.

04_HSJ_92_percent_of_waiting_list_in_England

Waiting times worsened in most specialties, and the decline in orthopaedic and general surgery waits is particularly notable.

05_HSJ_92_percent_of_waiting_list_by_specialty

The proportion of provider specialties achieving the incomplete pathways target fell again in January to 77.3 per cent (from 79.5 per cent in December).

06_HSJ_Provider_specialties_with_92_percent_of_list_within_18_weeks

The decline remains focused more on longer waiting services.

07_HSJ_Distribution_of_provider_specialty_waits

There was a welcome slight reduction in the number of services apparently managing their waiting lists perversely (by achieving the admitted and non-admitted targets, even though they consistently failed the incomplete pathways target).

Can this be attributed to an amnesty on the admitted patients target? I’m not sure; my understanding is that the latest amnesty was announced in a tripartite letter on 9 February which would have been too late to influence January’s practices.


08_HSJ_Apparent_perverse_wait_list_management

Local detail

North Bristol remains at the top of the table with half of England’s one year waits.

Tameside Hospital Foundation Trust is already moving itself down the table following their reporting break, by reducing 92nd centile waits from 25.3 to 24.4 weeks; they’ve effectively swapped places with United Lincolnshire Hospitals Trust.

09_HSJ_Top_twenty

Congratulations to Chesterfield Royal Hospital Foundation Trust for dropping out of the table from 7th to 36th place, by reducing 92nd centile waits from 23.5 to 18.0 weeks. Also to East Sussex Hospitals Trust, which dropped from 15th to 57th place (20.0 to 17.8 weeks).

Data for February, the last month to be published before the general election, is due out at 9:30am on 9 April. The March figures will be out a week after the election on 14 May.