8 in 10 NHS hospitals are treating FEWER patients now than before Covid trends now

8 in 10 NHS hospitals are treating FEWER patients now than before Covid trends now
8 in 10 NHS hospitals are treating FEWER patients now than before Covid trends now

8 in 10 NHS hospitals are treating FEWER patients now than before Covid trends now

The majority of NHS hospitals in England are still clearing fewer patients off their waiting lists than they were before Covid, MailOnline analysis shows.

Roughly 287,000 elective procedures, such as hip and knee ops, were carried out during January.

Yet 300,000-plus were performed during the same month in 2020 — two months before the pandemic hit Britain and caused NHS waiting lists to spiral to a record high.

Eight in 10 NHS trusts are still performing below pre-pandemic levels, according to our analysis of local data.

Three performed nearly half as many, despite the Government pledging to eradicate the backlog that has amassed since the Covid crisis began by drastically ramping up activity.

Just 29 of 133 trusts performed more inpatient procedures — such as hip and knee operations and cataracts — in January 2023 compared to the same month in 2020. University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, which has logged the biggest drop, performed just 2,170 at the start of this year, compared to 4,278 during the same mother three years ago

Just 29 of 133 trusts performed more inpatient procedures — such as hip and knee operations and cataracts — in January 2023 compared to the same month in 2020. University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, which has logged the biggest drop, performed just 2,170 at the start of this year, compared to 4,278 during the same mother three years ago

Hospitals in England carried out close to 290,000 procedures in January, meaning performance plummeted eight per cent over the three-year period. The pre-pandemic average was around 305,000 per month

Hospitals in England carried out close to 290,000 procedures in January, meaning performance plummeted eight per cent over the three-year period. The pre-pandemic average was around 305,000 per month

A record 7.21million Brits were stuck on the backlog at the end of January — up from 4.4million before Covid.

The surge in Covid admissions during the pandemic saw staff redeployed to treat infected patients and thousands of operations cancelled.

The list has continued to creep up despite Covid levels declining as more Brits come forward for treatment and hospitals struggle to return to pre-pandemic capacity. 

MailOnline's analysis comes after the three-day strike by junior doctors, considered among the worst in the health service's history.

Health officials have warned targets to curb waiting lists are 'under threat' because of the unprecedented action, which saw up to 60,000 medics walk out of hospitals across England and demand an inflation-busting 35 per cent pay rise.

MailOnline looked at the performance of 133 NHS trusts in England and compared the number of procedures they performed among patients that had been referred for elective treatment this January against the same month in 2020.

The figure does not include emergency surgeries, cancer treatments or diagnostic procedures.

But it does include overnight hip operations and day case procedures, such as cataract removals.

Just 29 trusts performed more than they did pre-Covid.

University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, which figures suggest has seen the biggest drop, performed just 2,170 at the start of this year.

For comparison, it managed 4,278 during the same month three years ago.

Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust, which is one of the biggest in the country and serves a population of half a million, was the next-worst offender.

Data suggests that it performed 48.6 per cent fewer operations at the start of 2023 (3,036) compared to three years earlier (1,559). 

Some trusts disputed the figures, arguing they only show a snapshot of hospital activity. However, the data is the only metric of elective procedures performed that is published by the NHS. 

At the other end of the scale, Alder Hey Children's Hospital experienced a 115.9 per cent increase in its activity (542 vs 251).

Data from NHS England shows that the number of people waiting for routine hospital treatment jumped by 13,000 in January to 7.21million. The record figure means there is 64 per cent more people stuck in the queue, often in pain, compared to before Covid struck

Data from NHS England shows that the number of people waiting for routine hospital treatment jumped by 13,000 in January to 7.21million. The record figure means there is 64 per cent more people stuck in the queue, often in pain, compared to before Covid struck

Professor Fiona Myint, vice president of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, said not having enough staff was making it hard to chip away at the backlog.

Staff shortages and absences among nurses and anaesthetists means operations are cancelled at short notice 'every week', she said.

Professor Myint called for a staff boost because without this 'reducing the backlog of patients waiting for treatment will be difficult and slow'. Many of these will be in agonising pain.

The NHS workforce plan, due to be published this month, is expected to double the number of medical school places in England and allow doctors to be trained on the job in a bid to boost recruitment.

Under the NHS recovery plan, unveiled by former Health Secretary Sajid Javid last year, the Government ordered the NHS to deliver around 30 per cent more procedures than pre-pandemic levels by 2024/25. 

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