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Belfast Live
Belfast Live
Health
Maurice Fitzmaurice

Northern Ireland hospital waiting times to be tackled by private sector

The Health Minister has announced a plan to ‘drive down’ waiting lists including offloading patients and procedures to the private sector.

Omagh Hospital is also to be designated as Northern Ireland’s second regional Day Procedure Centre, Robin Swann says.

In a written Assembly statement, the Minister says that “despite ongoing budgetary uncertainty”, he has been able to allocate £46million for “additional waiting list activity for the first six months of 2022/23”.

Read more: Stormont scoping 'new tech platform' to improve GP access for patients, says Health Minister

The statement adds that the money will be spent “paying independent sector providers to assess and treat patients who are on waiting lists”.

However, he adds: “Alongside the investment in buying additional capacity, we need to strengthen in house capacity on a major scale - to meet current and future needs.”

The Department of Health says that the £46million is “in addition to the £90million he allocated last year that delivered over 216,000 patient contacts by the end of February”.

Their statement added: “This included 35,000 new outpatient appointments, 120,000 diagnostic appointments and 13,000 in-patient day case treatment. The additional funding for the start of 2022/23 involves creating additional in-house health service capacity over and above normal day to day work, as well as paying independent sector providers to assess and treat patients who are on waiting lists.”

Mr Swann also announced “additional recurrent investment of over £16million per year on boosting in-house health service capacity to treat patients”.

His update came in a Written Assembly Statement, with the Minister warning that his funding allocations are “not without risk” in the absence of a budget. Funding pressures in health may be “significant” by the second half of 2022/23 and the financial situation “will be constrained whatever the final budget settlement”, he added.

Mr Swann said: “Nevertheless, as long as I am Health Minister I will have a relentless drive on bringing down waiting times. I will continue to put patients at the heart of my decision making and continue to do the best I can to deliver for them with the resources I have available.”

The Minister said there is “so much more to be done” but he is confident these newly announced initiatives “will make a difference”.

He also underlined the scale of the “Herculean task” in tackling waiting times, stating: “The realistic outlook for our overall waiting times position is a period of slowing growth before ultimately a sustained reversal as the decisions already taken on staffing and other investments in capacity begin to come to fruition.

“Alongside the investment in buying additional capacity, we need to strengthen in house capacity on a major scale - to meet current and future needs.”

The Department says that buying treatments for patients from the independent sector “helps reduce the capacity gap between demand for care and the health service’s current ability to meet it”.

The longer-term solution, as set out in the Elective Care Strategy published by the Minister in 2021, is to significantly grow health service capacity, they say.

Regarding the creation of Omagh Hospital as Northern Ireland’s second regional Day Procedure Centre, the Department outlined details of how it will work.

They stated: “Omagh Hospital Day Procedure Centre will see seven regional theatre lists per week across urology and general surgery - two specialities with some of the longest waits across the HSC. This means an extra 1,750 patients across these specialities will be treated per year when fully implemented. In addition 10 regional endoscopy sessions at Omagh Hospital will see an extra 3,000 patients per year.

“The regional endoscopy extension at Omagh hospital will further be supported with 20 extra sessions at Lagan Valley Hospital. In total approximately 9,000 extra patients will be seen per year. These additional sessions will reduce waiting lists with the intention of ultimately eradicating them.

“Lagan Valley Hospital Day Procedure Centre was set up in 2020 and is further ramping up activity to deliver over 900 theatre lists per year with over 5,000 patients treated across ENT, urology, hernias and gynaecology.

“Musgrave Park Hospital Duke of Connaught is an orthopaedic day procedure centre which will allow for almost 1,200 additional procedures per year including procedures such as treatment for carpel tunnel, Dupuytren’s contracture and trigger fingers and injections. This will help some of the very long waits across orthopaedic services.

“Regional urology stone services at Craigavon Area Hospital will see increase in the number of sessions for Extra Corporeal Shockwave Lithotripsy and increase in productivity per session. This means an additional 1,050 patients per year can be treated.”

The Written Ministerial Statement also detailed ongoing initiatives under the Elective Care Strategy. These include ‘mega-clinics’ across a number of specialities with 600 patients treated already this financial year, in addition to the 6,240 patients treated last year at these clinics.

The Minister said: “The new ways of providing services means that between September 2021 and May 2022 we have been able to reduce the waits for urgent scoliosis patients from 43 weeks to 4 weeks, and for routine scoliosis referrals from 115 weeks to 67 weeks with times continuing to reduce.

“We have also treated approximately 3,000 patients at the Regional Day Procedure Centre at Lagan Valley Hospital and approximately 5,000 patients have received endoscopy procedures at the centre. This is additional regional capacity to help reduce long waits.

“Members will already be aware of a range of other initiatives in place such as a private Independent Sector provider using vacant theatres in the South West Acute Hospital in Enniskillen which has already to treated hundreds of patients on waiting lists for hip replacement surgery.

“Over the last few months there has also been an upturn in orthopaedic surgery, which has allowed increased capacity to treat those who are waiting for new joints and other orthopaedic procedures.

“Our cancer screening programmes have significantly increased activity and both bowel and breast cancer screening is now above pre-pandemic levels, with bowel screening activity during 2021/22 at 124% of 2019/20 activity and the number of women invited for cancer screening in 2021/22 at 113% compared with 2019/20.”

Read more: Monkeypox symptoms as PHA says no confirmed cases in Northern Ireland

Read more: Belfast GP shares the good, the bad and the ugly side of doctors surgery practice

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