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Introduction

Industrial action taken by nursing staff and ambulance services staff may have had an impact on the statistics presented in this report.

In light of the impact COVID-19 has had on NHS activity and performance levels, the Welsh Government has published its programme for transforming and modernising planned care and reducing waiting lists in Wales. This plan sets out a number of key ambitions to reduce waiting times for people in Wales. We have incorporated these measurements of performance against these ambitions into this statistical release and on StatsWales.

Data provided in this statistical report has been provided by Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) unless stated otherwise. Data for each topic area is also available in more detail on our StatsWales website.

Main points

In January 73,818 calls were made to the 111 helpline service, back to levels of previous months after a record high in December 2022. Of these, almost 59,000 calls were answered, a decrease of 3.9% compared to the previous month. There were also about 423,700 hits on the NHS 111 Wales website and over 18,600 completed symptom checks (NHS 111 Wales).

In January there were 4,078 red (life threatening) calls to the ambulance service, 13.1% of all calls. This was a fall in red calls compared to December 2022. An average of 132 immediately life-threatening calls were made each day, back to similar levels as in 2022.

48.9% of red calls received an emergency response within eight minutes, this was 9.4 percentage points higher than December 2022. January saw performance returning to levels seen throughout 2022, after recording the lowest figure up to that point in December 2022. Data for red calls are only comparable from May 2019 onwards.

There was an average of 2,514 daily attendances to emergency departments, a decrease compared to the previous month. Performance improved against the four hour and twelve hour targets, the best performance since July 2021 and December 2021 respectively. The average (median) time spent in emergency departments decreased in January compared to the previous month to two hours and thirty five minutes, the best since April 2021.

The pandemic has caused a large increase in patient pathways waiting to start treatment. However, in December the number fell slightly, from over 748,000 to around 735,000, a third consecutive decrease following consistent increases from April 2020. The number of patient pathways is not the same as the number of individual patients, because some people have multiple open pathways. More information is available in the Welsh Government’s Chief Statistician’s blog.

New management information suggests that in December 2022, when there were about 735,000 open patient pathways, there were about 577,400 individual patients on treatment waiting lists in Wales. This was the third consecutive monthly fall, a decrease of over 8,500 patients from November.

The proportion of patient pathways waiting less than 26 weeks decreased slightly to 55.3% in December. This has been relatively stable for some time after falling significantly from the levels pre-pandemic. The number of pathways waiting longer than 36 weeks decreased for the fourth consecutive month in December, to just over 248,000, but remains high in historical context.

About 45,300 pathways were waiting more than two years, 36% lower than the peak, following a ninth consecutive monthly fall after a consistent increase over the previous year. The average (median) time patient pathways had been waiting for treatment at the end of December increased slightly on the previous month to 22.0 weeks.

The number of pathways waiting longer than one year for their first outpatient appointment decreased to around 75,000. The planned care recovery target has not been met, despite a reduction of 27% from the peak reached in August 2022.

For diagnostic services, the number of patient pathways waiting increased slightly to about 111,800 in December. The number of patient pathways waiting longer than eight weeks (the target maximum wait) increased to just over 47,000, in December.

For therapies, the number of patient pathways waiting decreased to about 61,000 in December but remains high in historical context. The number waiting longer than fourteen weeks (the target maximum wait) decreased to about 9,200, falling for the ninth consecutive month.

For cancer services, fewer people started their first definitive treatment in December (1,520) than the previous month. The number of pathways closed following the patient being informed they did not have cancer decreased from the previous month to (11,432). Performance decreased against the 62 day target in December to 52.9% compared to 53.9% the previous month, and is the second lowest on record.

Unscheduled care

New data relating to unscheduled care are provided for the month of January 2023.

Industrial action taken by some ambulance services staff in January may have had an impact on the statistics for unscheduled care presented in this report.

Calls to 111 service

As of 16 March 2022, the non-emergency 111 helpline service has been rolled out across the whole of Wales.

In January, a total of 73,818 calls were made to the 111 helpline service, back to levels of prior months after reaching a record high in December 2022. Of these, almost 59,000 (80%) calls were answered by the 111 service in Wales, an average of almost 1,900 calls per day. This is a decrease of 3.9% in answered calls compared to the previous month.

An estimated 15,033 (20%) calls were ended by the caller before being answered. Of these, 3,747 were ended within 60 seconds of the automated messages, suggesting their needs were likely to have been met.

Just under 11,300 calls were abandoned after 60 seconds and these are regarded as callers who were more likely to have still required the service after the messages but were unable to get through or decided not to wait. This number has fallen back to levels of prior months after reaching a peak in December 2022, more than 4 times higher than the previous peak in July 2022.

Of the calls answered, over 1,261 calls indicated that they wished to conduct the call in Welsh.

There were about 423,700 hits on the NHS 111 Wales website and over 18,600 completed symptom checks (NHS 111 Wales) in January.

More data is published on StatsWales.

Emergency calls to the ambulance service

A wider range of ambulance quality indicators are published on the Emergency Ambulance Services Committee (EASC) website and on StatsWales.

Activity

Figure 1: Average daily emergency ambulance calls, by call type and month, January 2018 to January 2023 [Note 1]
Image

Description of Figure 1: A line charts showing the number of emergency calls received by the Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust (WAST) fell during the COVID-19 pandemic but has since returned to a pre covid level.

Source: Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust (WAST) (Emergency ambulance calls and responses to red calls, by local health board and month on StatsWales)

[Note 1] An update to call handling in May 2019 resulted in a change to red incident volume. It is not possible to directly compare before and after this date. Further details are available in the quality information.

In January, over 31,000 emergency calls were made to the ambulance service. This was an average of 1,001 calls per day, a decrease of 315 (24%) calls on average per day than the previous month, and 189 (15.9%) fewer calls on average per day than the same month last year. The total number of calls in January was the lowest since comparable records began.

Calls to the ambulance service are categorised as red (immediately life-threatening), amber (serious but not life-threatening) or green (non-urgent). An average of 132 red calls were made per day in January. This was a 31.5% decrease from the previous month (192), which was the highest recorded up to that point. However this was still the fifth highest number of daily red calls on record.

In January, the proportion of all calls that were immediately life-threatening was 13.1%, down from 14.6% in December 2022,  which was the highest figure on record.

Performance
Target
  • 65% of red calls (immediately life-threatening – someone is in imminent danger of death, such as a cardiac arrest) to have a response within 8 minutes.
Figure 2: Percentage of red calls which received an emergency response at the scene within 8 minutes of patient location and chief complaint being established, by month [Note 1] 
Image

Description of Figure 2: A line chart showing that performance for emergency response calls improved during the initial coronavirus period but has otherwise trended downwards over the long term.

Source: Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust (WAST) (Emergency responses: minute-by-minute performance for red calls by local health board and month on StatsWales)

[Note 1] An update to call handling in May 2019 resulted in a change to red incident volume. It is not possible to directly compare before and after this date. Further details are available in the quality information.

In January, 48.9% of emergency responses to immediately life threatening (red) calls arrived within 8 minutes. This was 9.4 percentage points higher than the previous month, which was the lowest figure recorded, but 3.6 percentage points lower than in January 2022. In recent years the proportion on red calls responded to within 8 minutes has fallen fairly consistently. It is important to note that over the same period there has been a significant increase in the volume of red calls received. In 2022 around 70% more red calls were received than in 2020 and 2019.

The median response time in the four years prior to the pandemic ranged between 4 minutes 30 seconds and 6 minutes for red calls. In January, the average (median) response time to immediately life-threatening ‘red’ calls was 8 minutes 11 seconds. This was 1 minute and 49 seconds faster than previous month, but 32 seconds slower than January 2022

The majority of calls to the ambulance service are categorised as ‘amber’ calls, for which there is no performance target for call response times. In January, the median response time for amber calls was 53 minutes and 28 seconds. This was about 2 hours and 35 minutes faster than in December 2022 and almost 9 minutes faster than in January 2022.

Emergency department attendances and admissions to hospital

A wider range of emergency department performance statistics are published on the National Collaborative Commissioning Unit (NCCU) website, as management information.

Activity

Figure 3: Average attendances in NHS Wales accident and emergency departments, and admissions to hospital resulting from attendances at major emergency departments per day, by month [Note 1]
Image

Description of Figure 3: A line chart showing A&E attendances, which are generally higher in the summer months than the winter. There was a decrease in attendances due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Source: Emergency department data set (EDDS), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Number of attendances in NHS Wales emergency departments by age band, sex and site on StatsWales)

[Note 1]: Chart shows number of attendances at both major emergency departments and minor injuries units, and the number of admissions resulting from attending major emergency departments only.

In January there were about 77,900 attendances to all NHS Wales emergency departments. This was an average of 2,514 emergency department attendances per day; 335 attendances fewer per day on average than in the previous month.

In January, over 14,200 patients were admitted to the same or a different hospital following attendance at a major emergency department. This was 8.1% lower than the previous month and 2.4% higher than the same month in 2022.

Performance

Targets
  • 95% of new patients should spend less than 4 hours in emergency departments from arrival until admission, transfer or discharge.
  • No patient waiting more than 12 hours in emergency departments from arrival until admission, transfer or discharge.
Figure 4: Percentage of patients admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours at NHS emergency departments, by month
Image

Description of Figure 4: A line chart showing the percentage of patients admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours at NHS emergency departments fell during the coronavirus pandemic and has not recovered to pre-pandemic levels.

Source: Emergency department data set (EDDS), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Performance against 4 hour target by hospital on StatsWales)

In January, 69.9% of patients in all NHS emergency departments spent less than 4 hours in the department from arrival until admission, transfer or discharge. This was 6.4 percentage points higher than the previous month, which was the lowest on record, and the highest since July 2021.

In 2019, the median time patients spent in emergency departments was around 2 hours and 30 minutes. During the early part of the pandemic, as attendances decreased the median time spent in the department decreased, to a low of 1 hours 47 minutes in April 2020. Since then, median times have increased and reached a record high of 3 hours and 8 minutes in March 2022. In the latest data for January, the median waiting time was 2 hours and 35 minutes, 27 minutes quicker than the previous month and the best on record since April 2021.

The median time spent in emergency department varies by age. Prior to the pandemic, children (aged 0 to 4) spent between 1 hour and 30 minutes and 2 hours in emergency departments, while older patients (aged 85 or greater) spent between 3 hours and 30 minutes and 5 hours.

In January, children (aged 0 to 4) spent an average of 2 hours and 2 minutes. Adults aged 85 and over spent an average of 6 hours and 11 minutes in emergency departments.

Figure 5: Patients waiting more than 12 hours to be admitted, transferred or discharged at NHS emergency departments, by month
Image

Description of Figure 5: A line chart showing the number of patients waiting longer than 12 hours, which fell sharply during the initial coronavirus period but has otherwise trended upwards over the long term.

Source: Emergency department data set (EDDS), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Performance against the 12 hour target by hospital on StatsWales)

In January there were 8,999 patients waiting 12 hours or more. This was 3,095 (25.6%) fewer than in the previous month, which was the highest on record, and the best since December 2021.

Scheduled care activity

New data relating to unscheduled care are provided for the month of December 2022.

Industrial action taken by nursing staff may have had an impact on the scheduled care statistics presented in this report.

Outpatient referrals and appointments

Activity

Figure 6: Average daily referrals for first outpatient appointment, by month
Image

Description of Figure 6: A line chart showing outpatient referrals, which has been fluctuating with an upwards trend following a big drop in referrals in February 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Source: Outpatient Referral Dataset, Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Outpatient referrals on StatsWales)

An average of 3,126 referrals for first outpatient appointments were made per day in December. This is a decrease of 25.2% (1,053 less referrals per day on average) compared to November.

Performance

Targets

  • No one waiting for longer than a year for their first outpatient appointment by the end of 2022 (a target established in the planned care recovery plan).
Figure 7: Pathways waiting more than a year for their first appointment, by month
Image

Description of Figure 7: A line chart showing the number of patient pathways waiting longer than a year, which rapidly increased during the coronavirus pandemic but has been coming down in recent months.

Source: Referral to treatment times (RTT), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Referral to treatment on StatsWales)

Pathways waiting longer than one year for a first outpatient appointment increased dramatically over the course of the pandemic.

In December, the number of pathways waiting longer than one year for their first outpatient appointment decreased by 12.1% compared to the previous month to around 75,000.

The planned care recovery plan target has not been met, despite a 27% fall from the peak reached in August 2022.

Diagnostic and therapy waiting times

Activity

Figure 8: Patient pathways waiting for diagnostic and therapy services, by month [Note 1]
Image

Description of Figure 8: A line chart showing the number of patient pathways waiting for diagnostic and therapy services. There is a long term upward trend in patients waiting for diagnostic services, including a sharp increase in the start of the coronavirus pandemic. The number of patient pathways waiting for therpapy services has been increasing since the start of 2021.

Source: Diagnostic and Therapy Services (DATS), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Diagnostic and Therapy Services Waiting Times by week on StatsWales)

[Note 1] The low point in April 2020 for therapies is in part due to Betsi Cadwaladr not submitting data for this month, please see the quality information.

In December there were just under 112,000 patient pathways waiting for diagnostics, a slight increase of 0.1% compared with the previous month. There were over 61,000 patient pathways waiting for therapies, a decrease of 6.2% compared to the previous month, but remaining high in historical context.

Performance

Targets
  • The maximum wait for access to specified diagnostic tests is 8 weeks.
  • The maximum wait for access to specified therapy services is 14 weeks.
  • The planned care recovery plan established a target date of Spring 2024 to reach these targets.
Figure 9: Patient pathways waiting over the target time for diagnostic and therapy services, by month [Note 1] 
Image

Description of Figure 9: Line chart showing the number of patient pathways waiting longer than 8 weeks for diagnostic services and 14 weeks for therapy services respectively. After a big increase in patients waiting longer than 8 weeks for diagnostic services at the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the number of patient pathways waiting has been slowly coming down. The number of patient pathways waiting longer than 14 weeks for therapy services peaked in June 2020 and March 2022, but has been falling since.

Source: Diagnostic and Therapy Services (DATS), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Diagnostic and Therapy Services Waiting Times by week on StatsWales)

[Note 5]: Betsi Cadwaladr did not submit data for April 2020, so are not included in the Wales figures for this month.

At the end of December, about 47,000 patient pathways were waiting longer than the target time for diagnostics. This was an increase of 10.6% compared to the previous month.

At the end of December there were about 9,200 patient pathways waiting longer than the target time for therapies. This was a decrease of 3.9% compared to the previous month and a 37% fall from the peak in March 2022.

Median waiting times had been relatively stable for diagnostic tests since 2017 (2.8 weeks on average) and for therapy services since 2018 (3.6 weeks on average). Median waiting times for both services peaked in 2020 (14.3 weeks for diagnostics and 14.9 weeks for therapies).

In December, the median waiting time for diagnostic tests was 6.4 weeks, compared to 5.4 weeks in the previous month. The median waiting time for therapy services was 6.2 weeks, compared to 5.2 weeks in the previous month.

Referral to treatment time

Referral to treatment time statistics show monthly data on waiting times for both open and closed pathways following a referral by a GP or other medical practitioner to hospital for treatment in the NHS. Open pathways are those that remain on the waiting list for treatment, whereas closed pathways are those taken off the waiting list.

Activity is measured by patient pathways, which differs to the number of patients. More information on this difference is available in the Welsh Government’s Chief Statisticians blog.

Also published is newly collected management information for the number of individual patients on treatment waiting lists in Wales.

Performance

Targets
  • No patients waiting longer than two years in most specialities by March 2023, and no patients waiting longer than one year in most specialities by Spring 2025 (new targets established in the planned care recovery plan).
  • 95% of patients waiting less than 26 weeks from referral.
  • No patients waiting more than 36 weeks for treatment from referral.
Figure 10: Patient pathways waiting to start treatment, by month 
Image

Description of Figure 10: Line chart showing the total number of patient pathways waiting to start treatment and the number waiting over one year and two years. Since the coronavirus pandemic the number waiting has increased significantly but has recently started to fall. The number of patients waiting longer than one year and two years both saw a rise due to the coronavirus pandemic, but numbers are now falling.

Source: Referral to treatment times (RTT), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Patient pathways waiting to start treatment by month, grouped weeks and stage of pathway on StatsWales)

In December there were over 735,000 patient pathways waiting to start treatment. This was the third consecutive monthly fall, down 1.8% from over 748,000 in November, but this is still the sixth highest number on record and 58.6% higher than February 2020. Waiting lists statistics are not directly comparable across the four nations of the UK (Chief Statistician's blog).

Just under 162,000 pathways were waiting more than one year in December. This number has fallen for the fourth consecutive month, though it has been relatively stable since Spring 2021. About 45,300 pathways were waiting more than two years, 36% lower than the peak, following a ninth consecutive monthly fall after a consistent increase over 2021.

The number of patient pathways is not the same as the number of individual patients, because some people have multiple open pathways.

We do not have official statistics on the number of individual patients waiting to start treatment. However, newly collected management information suggests that in November, when the National Statistics (above) reported there were over 735,000 open patient pathways, there were estimated to be 577,400 individual patients on treatment waiting lists in Wales. This was the third consecutive monthly fall, a decrease of over 8,500 patients from November.

Unlike the National Statistics elsewhere in this release, which have been independently assessed against the Code of Practice for statistics, this estimate is based on newly collected management information. Whilst the principles of the Code of Practice have been applied, quality assurance is not to the level of the National Statistics. Work is ongoing to further understand the strengths and limitations of this data and this will be communicated as we learn more. For these reasons there is greater uncertainty around this estimate than with the other figures in this release. However, the level of public interest in understanding the number of patients in addition to the number of patient pathways adds sufficient value to warrant making this available.

Figure 11: Percentage of patient pathways waiting less than 26 weeks, by month
Image

Description of Figure 11: Line chart showing the percentage of patient pathways waiting less than 26 weeks and the 95% performance target line. During the coronavirus pandemic the percentage of patients waiting less than 26 weeks decreased sharply, and performance has since stabilized between 50 to 60%.

Source: Referral to treatment times (RTT), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Percentage of patient pathways waiting to start treatment within target time by month and grouped weeks on StatsWales)

Of the over 735,000 patient pathways waiting to start treatment, by the end of December, 55.3% had been waiting less than 26 weeks. This was 0.7 percentage points lower than in the previous month and 29 percentage points lower than February 2020.

Figure 12: Patient pathways waiting more than 36 weeks, by month and weeks waited
Image

Description of Figure 12: Line chart showing the number of patient pathways waiting more than 36 weeks, which increased rapidly during the coronavirus pandemic. Throughout 2022 the number was still increasing, though at a slower rate.

Source: Referral to treatment times (RTT), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Percentage of patient pathways waiting to start treatment within target time by month and grouped weeks on StatsWales)

In December, around 248,000 patient pathways had been waiting more than 36 weeks. This represented 33.8% of all patient pathways waiting to start treatment. This was 4,668 (or 1.8%) fewer than in the previous month but still high in historical context.

The median time waiting to start treatment had generally been around 10 weeks pre pandemic between late 2013 and February 2020. This increased during the pandemic and peaked at a record high of 29 weeks in October 2020. In December, the median waiting time was 22.0 weeks, which was an increase from 21.2 weeks in the previous month.

Figure 13: Closed patient pathways, by month [Note 1]
Image

Description of Figure 13: Line chart showing the number of patient pathways closed, which generally fluctuates. After a big decrease in March 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic, the number of closed pathways has steadily risen to pre-pandemic levels.

Source: Referral to treatment times (RTT), Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) (Closed patient pathways by month, local health board and weeks waiting on StatsWales)

[Note 6] Data revised to now include Cwm Taf Morgannwg health board closed pathways. Up to the July 2022 statistical release, the data series was not available for Cwm Tag Morgannwg. More details are available in the quality information.

The number of patient pathways closed in December was 96,845. This was an average of 4,842 patient pathways closed per working day. This was a decrease from the previous month.

Cancer services

These statistics were previously labelled as experimental (ONS). Following a review of methods, quality and utility we have now removed the experimental label and from November 2022 these are official statistics (UKSA).

A number of wider measures from the suspected cancer pathway are produced by Digital Health and Care Wales are published alongside this statistical release.

Activity

Figure 14: Closed suspected cancer pathways in the month, by month and outcome [Note 1]
Image

Description of Figure 14: Line chart showing the number of patients informed they do not have cancer, which fluctuates but generally showing an upwards trend, and the number of patients starting their first definitive treatment, which has been stable since recording began.

Source: Suspected Cancer Pathway, Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) and National Data Resource (NDR) (Suspected cancer pathway (closed pathways) on StatsWales)

[Note 1]: New suspected cancer pathway data collection was introduced in December 2020.

In December 1,520 pathways where the patient was newly diagnosed with cancer started their first definitive treatment in the month. This was a decrease of 13.1% compared to the previous month.

11,432 pathways were closed following the patient being informed they did not have cancer. This is a decrease of 21.2% compared to the previous month. In December, 11,842 patient pathways were opened in the month following a new suspicion of cancer. This was a decrease of 3,865 (24.6%) on the previous month.

Performance

Target
  • At least 75% of patients should start treatment within 62 days (without suspensions) of first being suspected of cancer. Data published for time periods before December 2020 are not subject to the target.
  • The planned care recovery plan established a new target of 80%, to be reached by 2026.
Figure 15: Percentage of pathways where the patient started their first definitive treatment within the target time, by month [Note 1] 
Image

Description of Figure 15: Line chart showing the percentage of patients that started their first definitive treatment within 62 days of first being suspected of cancer and the 80% performance target. Performance fluctuates, but there is a general downwards trend in recent years.

Source: Suspected Cancer Pathway, Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) and National Data Resource (NDR) (Suspected cancer pathway (closed pathways) on StatsWales)

[Note 1]: New suspected cancer pathway data collection was introduced in December 2020.

In December, 52.9% (804 out of 1,520) of pathways started their first definitive treatment within 62 days of first being suspected of cancer. This was 1.0 percentage point lower than the previous month, 6.7 percentage points lower than December 2021 and the second lowest on record.

Quality and methodology information

All quality and methodology information in relation to this statistical release can be found in the NHS activity and performance summary: quality report

Well-being of Future Generations Act (WFG)

The Well-being of Future Generations Act 2015 is about improving the social, economic, environmental and cultural wellbeing of Wales. The Act puts in place seven wellbeing goals for Wales. These are for a more equal, prosperous, resilient, healthier and globally responsible Wales, with cohesive communities and a vibrant culture and thriving Welsh language. Under section (10)(1) of the Act, the Welsh Ministers must (a) publish indicators (“national indicators”) that must be applied for the purpose of measuring progress towards the achievement of the wellbeing goals, and (b) lay a copy of the national indicators before Senedd Cymru. Under section 10(8) of the Well-being of Future Generations Act, where the Welsh Ministers revise the national indicators, they must as soon as reasonably practicable (a) publish the indicators as revised and (b) lay a copy of them before the Senedd. These national indicators were laid before the Senedd in 2021. The indicators laid on 14 December 2021 replace the set laid on 16 March 2016.

Information on the indicators, along with narratives for each of the wellbeing goals and associated technical information is available in the Wellbeing of Wales report.

Further information on the Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015.

The statistics included in this release could also provide supporting narrative to the national indicators and be used by public services boards in relation to their local wellbeing assessments and local wellbeing plans.

We want your feedback

We welcome any feedback on any aspect of these statistics which can be provided by email to stats.healthinfo@gov.wales.

Next update

23 March 2023

Contact details

Statistician: Ryan Pike
Email: stats.healthinfo@gov.wales

Media: 0300 025 8099

SFR 18/2023

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