By Sam Blanchard Senior Health Reporter For Mailonline
Published: 11:04 BST, 13 June 2019 | Updated: 11:04 BST, 13 June 2019
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Almost three quarters of NHS hospitals take more than two months to start patients' cancer treatment, figures have revealed.
Hospital trusts in England are supposed to begin treatment within 62 days of a GP's referral in 85 per cent of cases.
But last year only 37 out of 131 managed to hit that target, with 94 keeping seriously ill patients waiting longer.
In the worst performing health systems almost 40 per cent of people had to wait longer than they should have done, while the figure was less than five per cent in the best performing.
Experts warned the longer people are made to wait before starting their treatment, the longer it will take them to recover from the ordeal of having cancer.
Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust was the worst performing by the 62-day measure in 2018-19 but the health body said it has already made improvements which should see it hit the NHS's target by the summer
Figures uncovered by the BBC show the number of hospital trusts leaving 15 per cent or more of people waiting too long has almost tripled since 2014.
Five years ago (2013/14) just 36 trusts were missing the 62-day target – that figure rose to 94 for 2018/19.
NHS England as a whole managed to treat just 79.4 per cent of people within 62 days of their urgent referral from a GP, while 32,000 people waited longer.
But there is wide variation among different areas of the country.
Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust, in Kent, was the worst performing, with just 60.8 per cent of people getting treatment within 62 days.
The hospital body insisted the situation there has improved since the figures were recorded.
A spokesperson said: 'We have seen a large increase in demand with 23%per cent more suspected cancer referrals now than this time last year.
'We have made changes to our systems and processes as well as invested in additional staff and facilities to increase the number of patients we see, diagnose and treat.
'As a result, we have made significant improvements and are already in a much better place than the data published today shows.
'We are confident that we will hit the national 62 day wait cancer standard in the summer, in a sustainable way going forwards.'
In all, 28 trusts failed to treat even three quarters of their patients on time – a measure that would still be significantly lower than the NHS target.
Wolverhampton, Weston, Southend, Bradford, University College London, Mid Essex, Hull and East Yorkshire and East and North Hertfordshire all treated fewer than 70 per cent of patients on time.
'The longer people have to wait for diagnosis and get treatment, the longer it will impact them, their health and wellbeing and just getting through that experience,' Macmillan Cancer Support's Moira Fraser-Pearce told the BBC.
At the other end of the scale, the NHS in Kingston upon Thames smashed the target and treated 95.9 per cent of people within the 62-day limit.
Frimley, Bolton, Mid Cheshire and Tameside and Glossop all also posted figures higher than 90 per cent.
Improving cancer survival rates is one of the NHS's priorities and in its long-term plan this year it said investment would be ramped up in improving diagnostics.
New scanners, rapid diagnosis centres and more staff were all included in plans to boost survival rates.
Monthly figures released today revealed the NHS's performance has got worse on a number of other key measures.
These included an all-time low in the