06/06/2003

£50m drive to reduce orthopaedic waiting lists launched

A £50 million drive to eliminate long waits for NHS orthopaedic patients and boost capacity in the NHS, so that an extra 41,000 patients per year can receive an operation, was launched by Health Secretary Alan Milburn today.

The funding will be invested in NHS orthopaedic services including those in NHS Diagnosis and Treatment Centres (DTCs) and spent on modernising theatres and buying new equipment or upgrading existing facilities.

It is hoped that the extra resources will deliver shorter waiting times for patients and ensure that no orthopaedic patient is waiting more than six months for treatment by December 2005.

Around one-in-four patients on the overall NHS waiting list need orthopaedic surgery. Many of these are elderly patients whose quality of life is affected by their condition which causes immobility, pain and discomfort.

Official figures at the end of March 2003 indicate that 254,496 orthopaedic patients were waiting for inpatient treatment in England - a fall of almost 10,000 since last December.

By the end of next year no NHS orthopaedic patient should ever wait more than nine months, with urgent patients being seen more quickly, the government says.

The £50 million has been targeted on areas with the greatest orthopaedic capacity problems, which have been identified by local strategic health authorities to benefit the most from the extra investment, which will reduce their orthopaedic waiting lists and times.

Health Secretary Alan Milburn said: "With sustained investment and reform now really beginning to bite in the NHS, in the next year the maximum waiting time will fall further. There is a long way to go, but the NHS is now turning the corner.

"We are now starting to see real improvements across the board. There is much more to do, but these results show an improving trend is now clearly established. Far fewer people are waiting a long time at every stage of treatment."

(GMcG)

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