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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Neil Shaw

Average wait for ambulance if you have a stroke is now more than an hour

The average response time last month for ambulances in England dealing with the most urgent incidents – defined as calls from people with life-threatening illnesses or injuries – was nine minutes and 35 seconds, NHS England figures show.

This is up from eight minutes and 51 seconds in February and is the longest average since current records began in August 2017.

Ambulances in England took an average of one hour, one minute and three seconds last month to respond to emergency calls, such as burns, epilepsy and strokes.

This is up from 42 minutes and seven seconds in February and is the longest time on record for this category of call-outs.

Response times for urgent calls – such as late stages of labour, non-severe burns and diabetes – averaged three hours, 28 minutes and 13 seconds.

This is up from two hours, 16 minutes and 13 seconds in February and is again a record.

A record 22,506 people had to wait more than 12 hours in A&E departments in England in March from a decision to admit to actually being admitted, figures from NHS England show.

The figure is up from 16,404 in February, and is the highest for any calendar month in records going back to August 2010.

A total of 136,297 people waited at least four hours from the decision to admit to admission in March, another all-time high.

Just 71.6% of patients in England were seen within four hours at A&Es last month, the lowest percentage in records going back to November 2010.

The operational standard is at least 95% of patients attending A&E should be admitted, transferred or discharged within four hours, but this has not been met nationally since 2015.

The number of people having to wait more than 52 weeks to start hospital treatment in England was 299,478 in February, down from 311,528 the previous month.

The Government and NHS England have set the ambition of eliminating all waits of more than a year by March 2025.

NHS England figures show 220,037 urgent cancer referrals were made by GPs in England in February, up 26% from 174,762 in the same month last year.

The equivalent figure for February 2019, a non-pandemic year, was 179,833.

The proportion of patients in England seeing a specialist within two weeks was 81%, up from 75% in January, which was the lowest percentage in records going back to October 2009.

Some 74% of patients urgently referred for suspected cancer in England in February were diagnosed or had cancer ruled out within 28 days.

Data on this metric only goes back to April 2021 so there are no comparable figures for February 2021.

The elective recovery plan sets a goal of 75% of patients who have been urgently referred by their GP for suspected cancer to be diagnosed or have cancer ruled out within 28 days by March 2024.

A total of 23,281 people in England were waiting more than two years to start routine hospital treatment at the end of February, NHS England said.

This is down slightly from 23,778 at the end of January but is around nine times the 2,608 people who were waiting longer than two years in April 2021.

The Government and NHS England have set the ambition to eliminate all waits of more than two years, except when it is the patient’s choice, by July.

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