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The BBC's Fergus Walsh
"It has been patients with less urgent problems who've most benefited"
 real 28k

Health Secretary Alan Milburn
"Nobody is going to judge us on one set of figures"
 real 28k

Dr Liam Fox and the BMA's Dr Peter Hawker
"Many people are still waiting"
 real 28k

Wednesday, 17 May, 2000, 09:52 GMT 10:52 UK
NHS waiting list pledge met
Hospital ward
There are still more than a million on the NHS waiting list
The government will announce that it has achieved its election promise to reduce waiting lists in England by 100,000.

Waiting List
May 1997 - 1.16m
March 1998 - 1.3m
March 2000 - 1.037m
Figures out on Wednesday show that fewer people are waiting for treatment than under the previous Conservative government.

At the end of March 2000 there were 121,000 fewer people on the waiting list than there were in March 1997. There are now 1,037,000 patients waiting for operations.

At the same time, the number of people waiting longer than 13 weeks for an appointment to see a hospital specialist fell by 94,000 in the three months between December 1999 and March 2000.



Today's figures do suggest we are making progress, but there is a long way to go

Alan Milburn, Health Secretary

Health Secretary Alan Milburn told the BBC that the figures suggested government reform and investment in the NHS was beginning to yield tangible results.

He said: "There is no crowing about this - this is very much work in progress.

"We know that there is a long way to go to get the sort of waiting times patients want and expect in a 21st century health service."

The figures come at a time when the prime minister is focusing on the quality of care the NHS is delivering to patients, and has launched a mass consultation exercise over the future of the service.

Controversial indicator

The waiting list target has always been controversial with opposition politicians claiming fiddles, and health experts declaring it virtually useless as a way of judging the true performance of the NHS.

Shadow health secretary Dr Liam Fox said that issues of quality, waiting times and access to speedy treatment by the sickest patients were of greater importance than simple waiting list figures which he described as a "statistical trick".

Dr Fox told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "I don't think patients will share New Labour's self-congratulation.

"Up and down the country, doctors have told us that clinical priorities have been distorted, with many more minor cases being treated, often at the expense of more serious cases.

"We have got numerous examples of the statistics being massaged artificially to remove patients from the list. There has created a huge waiting list for the waiting list, with over half a million people waiting to go on the list."




I don't think patients will share New Labour's self-congratulation

Dr Liam Fox, Shadow Health Secretary
Dr Peter Hawker, chairman of the British Medical Association's consultants committee, said he was delighted the waiting list target had been achieved.

But he said: "What we hope is that it can be put in its rightful place as one of a range - and not the most important of the range - of performance indicators, and we can get on with the important job, which is tackling waiting times, access to service, quality of service and actually improving the health service, rather than concentrating on a totally artificial indicator."

Key pledge

The pledge to slash waiting lists was one of Labour's key election pledges and one which it expected to meet early in its first parliament.

Health Secretary Alun Milburn
Health Secretary Alun Milburn: "No crowing"
But bad winters - bringing with them an upsurge in flu cases which put massive strain on NHS resources - and a shortage of beds for emergency patients have often led to routine operations being cancelled.

These factors have led to the waiting list target being harder than expected to achieve.

In Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland the numbers waiting have in fact gone up, while the figures for England may yo-yo up and down for some time.

When Labour came to power in May 1997, the number of people waiting for hospital treatment in England stood at 1.16m.

But by March the following year, the list had risen to 1.3m.

Over the past two years the government has struggled to get the figures down.

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See also:

17 May 00 | Health
Analysis: Waiting lists
22 Dec 99 | Northern Ireland
Shock rise in waiting lists
17 Jan 00 | UK Politics
Analysis: Blair's NHS gamble
19 Jan 00 | UK Politics
Blair defends NHS pledge
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