‘National tragedy’: figures show large rise in
people dying while on NHS waiting list
Figures obtained by Labour show an estimated 120,695
people died in England while awaiting treatment
Denis
Campbell Health policy editor
Thu 31 Aug
2023 00.01 BST
More than
120,000 people in England died last year while on the NHS waiting list for
hospital treatment, figures obtained by Labour appear to show.
That would
be a record high number of such deaths, and is double the 60,000 patients who
died in 2017/18.
For
example, the Royal Free hospital in London said it had had 3,615 such deaths,
while there were 2,888 at the Morecambe Bay trust in Cumbria and 2,039 at Leeds
teaching hospitals trust.
Hospital
bosses said the deaths highlighted the dangers of patients having to endure
long waits for care and reflected a “decade of underinvestment” that had left
the NHS with too few staff and beds.
Healthwatch
England, a patient advocacy group that scrutinises NHS performance, said the
number of people dying while waiting for care was “a national tragedy”.
Louise
Ansari, the chief executive, said: “We know that delays to care have
significant impacts on people’s lives, putting many in danger.”
Dr Emma
Runswick, the British Medical Association’s deputy chair of council, said the
fatalities were a “terrible indictment of this government’s mismanagement of
our health services”.
Labour
asked 138 health trusts how many patients had died during 2022 while they were
on the NHS waiting list. Of those, 35 (25%) responded, showing that 30,611 such
deaths had occurred.
Labour then
extrapolated that figure to estimate that across England as a whole, 120,695
people had died while awaiting hospital care, such as a hip or knee
replacement.
“Record
numbers of people are spending their final months in pain and agony, waiting
for treatment that never arrives,” said Wes Streeting, the shadow health
secretary. “The basic promise of the NHS – that it will be there for us when we
need it – has been broken.”
But NHS
England criticised the way Labour reached their conclusions and insisted that
they were unreliable and misleading.
“This
analysis, based on figures from just a quarter of hospital trusts, does not
demonstrate a link between waits for elective treatment and deaths, and it
would be misleading to suggest it does, given the data does not include the
cause of death or any further details on the person’s age and medical
conditions,” an NHS spokesperson said.
However,
groups representing doctors did not raise any concerns about the accuracy of
the figures. They said the deaths were closely linked to the intense pressure
hospitals were under and the widespread lack of staff that was hampering the
NHS’s efforts to provide timely care and cut the waiting list, which has now
risen to 7.6 million people – by far the largest number on record.
“These
figures are extremely worrying as waiting lists are highly likely to continue
to rise, potentially reaching the 9 million predicted by [ex-health secretary]
Sajid Javid. Every one of those has symptoms that may become increasingly
unbearable”, said Dr Tim Cooksley, the president of the Society for Acute
Medicine.
Matthew
Taylor, the chief executive of the NHS Confederation, which represents trusts,
said that Covid-19 would have been a factor in some of the estimated 120,695
deaths, but the key cause was the fact that the NHS has been left with far too
few resources to deal with the demand it is facing.
“These
figures are a stark reminder about the potential repercussions of long waits
for care,” Taylor said. “They are heartbreaking for the families who will have
lost loved ones and are deeply dismaying for NHS leaders who continue to do all
they can in extremely difficult circumstances.”
Meanwhile,
separate NHS figures showed that some hospitals have fewer beds per 1,000
people in their area than countries such as Mexico and Colombia.
Research by
the House of Commons library for the Liberal Democrats showed that England has
2,233 (6%) fewer beds than it had in 2015, despite a sharp increase in
patients’ need for care.
The
Homerton hospital in east London has just 0.9 beds for every 1,000 local
people. That is even fewer than in Mexico, which the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) says has the lowest number of beds per
capita in the world. The Homerton has 41.4% fewer beds than eight years ago,
the library found.
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