Of course, most Welsh patients are seen far more quickly than 12 months.
· All emergency admissions (between 60 and 70% of all those seen in Welsh hospitals) are treated immediately.
· For planned operations, over half of those on the in-patient list have been waiting for under three months. This suggests that half of Welsh patients, once an operation has been specified by the consultant, wait less than three months for hospital treatment.
· Eight out of ten patients are treated within six months, on that basis.
· Of the remaining two out of ten, all are treated within twelve months.
As well as bringing down long waits, the average length of time for all Welsh patients was reduced over the last twelve months. Average waiting times in England rose over the same period.
As far as outpatients are concerned, the target for the end of March was to have no-one waiting more than 12 months. A year before that, there were 13,845 patients in this position. On 31 March 2006, there were only 15! That’s a reduction of 99.9%. And none of the 15 are waiting for treatment at a Welsh NHS Trust. Of the 15 still waiting, 13 were from South East Wales, and were waiting for appointments in Bristol. None of the 13 were referrals from GPs.
Of course, as with in-patient treatment, most Welsh patients wait far less than 12 months for an out-patient appointment. On the basis set out earlier:
· 55% are seen within three months
· 80% are seen within six months
· 100% are seen within twelve months
I don’t want to get complacent, and we want to do even better. We have set challenging targets to bring down waiting times even further. But these figures show that overall, the NHS in Wales is going in the right direction.