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East Lancashire hospitals meet patient waiting time targets


TARGETS for patients to be diagnosed, assessed and receive their first treatment within 18 weeks of referral are being met at East Lancashire Hospitals.

Latest performance figures show that 98.7 per cent of outpatients are treated within that time, against a government target of 95 per cent. Figures also show 92.8 per cent of those whose conditions require a stay in hospital are treated in that time, compared to a government target of 90 per cent.

The figures are in stark contrast to those of 10 years ago, when Department of Health archives show that more than a quarter of all patients in East Lancashire waited more than five months to be admitted to hospital for surgery, and almost one in five waited that long for an outpatient procedure.

The Department of Health is planning to raise the bar again later this year, with new targets requiring an even greater percentage of patients to have their first definitive treatment within 18 weeks.

Val Bertenshaw, director of operations for East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, said: “Everyone in the trust has worked hard to achieve such a strong position against these targets, and further analysis shows us that those who did wait longer than 18 weeks usually missed out on the target only by a few days.

“Targets are set to get even tougher in September, but the trust’s strong performances place us in a great position to rise to that challenge.”

Simon Hill, consultant gynaecologist and 18-week lead for the trust, added: “We are always striving to make it even better, and the new targets will help.”

Comments(4)

Old Timer says...
8:29pm Sat 13 Jun 09

Targets? It's treatment they should be highlighting and the fight against super bugs. How can you reach a target when you are dealing with the unexpected. It is about time all these figures which mean nothing are put aside and listen to some of the stories that are coming out of our hospitals despite millions being invested. Hospital nurses and doctors and those involved direct with patients should have a say instead of the pen pushers who can fiddle any figures.
Time for a change.

e/lancs says...
6:55am Sun 14 Jun 09

Its good news that patients are waiting less time for diagnosis but people in East lancs still have less chance of surviving a trauma accident than people in west lancs who have five A&E DEPARTMENTS TO OUR NIL

Excluded says...
9:06am Sun 14 Jun 09

Old Timer, these figures are not meaningless.

Give most people the choice between starting treatment within 18 weeks and having to wait over 5 months for a first appointment. I'm pretty sure what they would want.

Sure there ares still problems in the NHS. But the fact that people no longer have to wait months and months for an appointment, let alone treatment, is a vast improvement.

holsten pils says...
10:01am Sun 14 Jun 09

nurses are supposedly encouraged by the trust to whistleblow and there are supposedly no comebacks on them but in reality they are scared stiff of whistleblowing as they are then targeted and can be moved from ward to ward , given crap shifts and sacked at the first chance management get to do so.


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