Plans to tackle the record waiting list for NHS treatment could be derailed by emergency care demands and a lack of staff, MPs have warned.
The backlog of patients waiting for planned care in England has soared to nearly six million as the number of 999 calls and A&E waiting times have both hit record highs.
In its new report, the cross-party Health and Social Care Committee said that tackling the wider backlog caused by the pandemic is a major and “unquantifiable” challenge as it includes all the people who have yet to come forward for care.
It calls for a broad national health and care recovery plan embracing emergency care, mental health, GPs, community care and social care.
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MPs said NHS staff are under pressure and could quit unless they see “light at the end of the tunnel” in the form of more staff to help them deal with the pressures on the health service.
The report said: “Now, as we approach a third year living with COVID, the catastrophic impact on patients waiting for NHS care is becoming clearer.
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“Of the 5.8 million patients waiting to start treatment in September 2021, 300,000 have been waiting more than a year and 12,000 more than two years.”
While MPs welcomed Government funding to create an extra nine million checks, scans and operations, they said NHS England has yet to publish its plan on “how it plans to meet its workforce requirements”, despite this being promised by Health Secretary Sajid Javid by the end of November 2021.
Committee chairman and Conservative MP Jeremy Hunt said: “Our report finds that the government’s recovery plans risk being thrown off course by an entirely predictable staffing crisis.
“The current wave of Omicron is exacerbating the problem, but we already had a serious staffing crisis, with a burnt-out workforce, 93,000 NHS vacancies and no sign of any plan to address this.
“Far from tackling the backlog, the NHS will be able to deliver little more than day-to-day firefighting unless the government wakes up to the scale of the staffing crisis facing the NHS, and urgently develops a long-term plan to fix the issue.”
Joanna Goulding, a 49-year-old from Warwickshire, has been in agony since the start of the pandemic, waiting for a hip, shoulder and two elbow replacements.
She has lived with rheumatoid arthritis since she was seven and already had both her hips replaced aged 22.
She first thought her left hip would need to be replaced again at the start of 2020.
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When she finally saw a consultant at the end of last year, she was told the joint had been dislocated for the last six months.
“It’s affecting literally every single part of my life,” Joanna told Sky News.
“I’ve become housebound for the most part now. I’m unable to do things like go shopping. I can’t take my children to the park.
“I feel forgotten about and abandoned and desperate because this isn’t living, it’s existing at the moment and it’s just hideous.”
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NHS faces a ‘gargantuan challenge’
Dr David Wrigley, the British Medical Association’s deputy council chair, said: “This wide-ranging and detailed report clearly lays out what a gargantuan challenge the NHS faces.
“The biggest barrier to tackling the backlog caused by the pandemic is a severe staffing crisis and our calls for improved workforce planning have thankfully been heard. It’s now time for the government to listen too.”
Siva Anandaciva, chief analyst at The King’s Fund think tank, said: “The unfortunate truth is there simply aren’t enough staff at the moment to deliver the volume of care that we need.
“Until there’s a national plan to grow and recruit and retain more stuff for the healthcare sector, it’s really hard to see how backlogs can be tackled either now or in the future.”
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A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson told Sky News: “The pandemic has put enormous pressures on the NHS but we are committed to supporting hardworking staff to ensure people get the treatment they need.
“We have provided an additional £5.9bn to help tackle the backlogs and we are investing £36bn over three years which will help deliver an extra nine million checks, scans and operations for patients.
“We have over 5,100 doctors and nearly 10,000 more nurses in the NHS compared to last year and we’re committed to delivering 50,000 more nurses by the end of this Parliament.”