Covid: NHS Wales under ‘substantial pressure’ amid backlog
The Welsh NHS is under “substantial pressure” as services return to pre-pandemic levels, its chief executive has warned.
Dr Andrew Goodall said the need to continue with Covid-19 precautions meant a “difficult combination” of factors was straining the system.
Monthly waiting times will be published on Thursday, amid a growing backlog of patients waiting for treatment.
One doctors’ group has called for a radical reorganisation of services.
Data from March showed there were 568,367 people on waiting lists in Wales, up 24.4% on the same time last year.
“They are still having to protect both staff and patients working around them. And they are the same staff who have been there through the pandemic, who are having to focus on the new services, to make sure people are supported as well.”

Dr Goodall said attendances at emergency departments had returned to pre-pandemic levels, and that one health board experienced its busiest-ever day for A&E attendances on Monday.
He added planned treatments were now at 70% of normal levels.
Dr Goodall said: “It is a substantial pressure, I think it is substantial for different reasons. NHS staff want to make sure that we are able to support our patients across Wales and make sure that they can be seen within the appropriate and right level of services.
“But they are having to balance a growth in emergency pressures back to normal levels.
“They are still having to protect both staff and patients working around them. And they are the same staff who have been there through the pandemic, who are having to focus on the new services, to make sure people are supported as well.”

Health boards asked to ‘innovate’
Health boards have been asked to come up with innovative ways of dealing with the backlog, and an initial £100m of new funding has been made available by the Welsh government to try to bring waiting lists down.
Pilot schemes have begun in some areas to reduce waiting times or improve the quality of life for those who will continue to face the longest delays in their treatment.
Surgical teams at the Princess of Wales hospital in Bridgend have already seen a significant reduction in waiting times for patients referred for urgent treatment after visiting A&E or their GP.
The Ambulatory Emergency Surgical Unit was launched at the hospital before the pandemic to allow patients to be assessed, diagnosed and treated – often on the same day. They do not need to be seen by separate medical teams or admitted as an inpatient.
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The model was so efficient it has since been expanded to emergency medical admissions, and will be implemented for emergency gynaecology admissions from 1 July.
Consultant surgeon Simon Weaver said the system had allowed about 80% of patients to be seen and treated within three hours, compared to about 30% before it was introduced.
“When it comes to resetting services it’s really important that we’re a getting a bang for our buck,” he said.
“We’ve got to take this as an opportunity to restart the NHS.”

‘Regional solutions’
While local innovations will help reduce some pressures, the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) has called for the creation of non-Covid hubs to tackle waiting lists.
Richard Johnson, the director of RCS in Wales, said: “There is now an urgency to develop these sites and have a radical rethink of how the NHS is working in Wales.
“We are looking at these sites for planned treatments. We are not talking about new sites, we are talking about a reorganisation of the sites we have in Wales already.”
Mr Johnson said an RCS survey found patients were prepared to travel in order to be treated at new hubs across Wales.
And he said there needed to be “an open and honest discussion” about the implications of not changing the way hospitals are currently organised.
Dr Goodall said many changes had been implanted already, including greater use of technology in connecting patients to clinicians.
He added it was “inevitable that we’re going to have to have more regional solutions, with health boards working alongside each other to achieve that”.
“And I know there’s a lot of clinical support for that to happen in Wales.”
“We are looking at these sites for planned treatments. We are not talking about new sites, we are talking about a reorganisation of the sites we have in Wales already.”
Delta variant cases ‘increasing’
Cases of the Delta variant of the virus, first identified in India, remain comparatively low in Wales compared to England.
Dr Goodall said the next two to four weeks would be crucial in determining whether a further increase in cases in Wales would result in a spike in hospital admissions.
He said: “Numbers associated with a Delta variant remain very low in Wales from a hospital perspective, although they’re increasing in terms of community cases. So we’re tracking it very carefully.
“But inevitably there will be some impact in Wales and it’s why, in part, I know that the first minister and the cabinet made decisions to defer some arrangements earlier on during this month, because it was to try and allow for more vaccination coverage for the population, which will provide a higher level of protection.”
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