NHS Activity and Performance Summary: January and February 2026
Report summarising data on activity and performance in the Welsh NHS for January and February 2026.
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In this page
Introduction
A monthly summary of NHS Wales activity and performance. Long term trends are explored in our annual reports, Trends in NHS urgent and emergency care activity and Trends in NHS planned care activity.
Data are provided by Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) and Welsh Ambulance Services University NHS Trust (WAST). Data for each topic area are also available in more detail on StatsWales.
Main points
Emergency services (February)
In February there were 817 purple calls to the ambulance service, around 2.6% of all calls, and 4,261 red calls, around 13.5% of all calls.
For patients in cardiac arrest for whom resuscitation was attempted, 21.4% had a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) at the time of arrival to hospital, a decrease compared with the previous month.
The median response times for purple calls was 6 minutes 50 seconds, shorter than the previous month. The median response times for red calls was 8 minutes 54 seconds, shorter than the previous month. The target for median response to both purple and red calls is 6 to 8 minutes, meaning the target for purple calls was met and the target for red calls was not.
In February there were just over 81,800 attendances to all emergency departments, an average of 2,923 attendances per day; this was 72 attendances more per day on average than in the previous month.
Performance against both the four-hour and twelve-hour targets improved compared with the previous month.
The average time spent in emergency departments was shorter than the previous month at 2 hours and 51 minutes.
Treatment waiting lists (January)
There were just over 713,000 referral to treatment (RTT) patient pathways waiting to start treatment, a decrease of around 27,900 since December. This is the lowest since April 2022 and the eighth month in a row where the figure has fallen. 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 chief statistician’s blog.
Management information suggests there were about 557,900 individual patients on treatment waiting lists.
The proportion of pathways waiting less than 26 weeks increased to 61.0% in January, the highest figure since June 2020. The number of pathways waiting longer than 36 weeks decreased to just over 202,700, the lowest figure since September 2020.
Just over 5,200 pathways were waiting more than two years, 92.6% lower than the peak and a decrease of around 44 (0.8%) from the previous month.
The average time patients had been waiting for treatment at the end of January was 1.2 weeks shorter than the previous month at 17.8 weeks, the lowest figure since April 2020.
Provisional data for February indicate a decrease in total pathways waiting and a decrease in pathways waiting more than two years.
There were just over 22,300 pathways waiting longer than one year for their first outpatient appointment, a decrease from the previous month, and 78.2% less than the peak in August 2022. This was the lowest figure since September 2020.
Diagnostics and therapies (January)
Diagnostics patient pathways waiting decreased to just under 135,300 in January. The number waiting longer than eight weeks (the target maximum wait) increased to just over 48,300, the highest figure since January 2024.
For therapies, pathways waiting increased to just over 55,700 and the number waiting longer than fourteen weeks (the target maximum wait) increased to just under 5,300, the highest figure since October 2024.
Cancer services (January)
2,074 people started their first definitive treatment in January, 59 more than the previous month. The number of patients informed they did not have cancer increased to 14,215. Performance worsened against the 62 day target in January, decreasing to 57%.
Ambulance calls
Until July 2025, 999 ambulance calls were categorised as red (immediately life-threatening), amber (serious but not life-threatening) or green (non-urgent).
On 1 July a new response model was implemented, and two new response categories were introduced to replace the previous red category. The new categories are purple: Arrest, for cardiac and respiratory arrests, and red: Emergency, for major trauma and other incidents where patients are at significant risk of cardiac or respiratory arrest if they do not receive a rapid response.
On 2 December 2025, three new categories replaced the previous amber and green categories. These are orange: Now, for serious conditions, yellow: Soon, for people who need to be assessed first, and green: Planned, for less urgent calls.
Data up to June 2025 based on the previous response model will remain available on StatsWales, however they are not comparable with the new measures. A wider range of quality indicators will be published by the NHS Wales Joint Commissioning Committee. This Chief Statistician’s update provides more information on the background to the new ambulance performance measures.
Activity
Figure 1: number of purple and red emergency ambulance calls, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 1: a line chart showing the number of purple calls and red calls has been relatively stable since July 2025.
Source: Welsh Ambulance Services University NHS Trust
[Note 1]: Detailed definitions for the measures are provided in the accompanying quality report.
Ambulance activity and performance measures, on StatsWales
In February, 817 purple calls were received by the ambulance service (around 2.6% of all calls), a decrease compared with January. 4,261 red calls were received (around 13.5% of all calls), a decrease compared with January.
There were 12,281 orange calls, 4,575 yellow calls, and 1,818 green calls.
Performance
Targets
- For purple and red calls the median and 90th percentile response time targets are 6-8 minutes and under 20 minutes respectively.
Figure 2: return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) rate, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 2: a line chart showing return of spontaneous circulation rates has fluctuated between 20% and 30%.
Source: Welsh Ambulance Services University NHS Trust
[Note 1]: Detailed definitions for the measures are provided in the accompanying quality report.
Ambulance activity and performance measures, on StatsWales
For patients in cardiac arrest for whom resuscitation was attempted, 21.4% had a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) at the time of arrival to hospital, a decrease compared with the previous month.
Figure 3: median and 90th percentile response times for purple and red emergency ambulance calls (minutes and seconds), by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 3: a line chart showing median and 90th percentile response times are shorter for purple calls than red calls, and all are relatively stable recently.
Source: Welsh Ambulance Services University NHS Trust
[Note 1]: Detailed definitions for the measures are provided in the accompanying quality report.
Ambulance activity and performance measures, on StatsWales
The median response time for purple calls was 6 minutes 50 seconds, shorter than in January. The 90th percentile (the point at which 90% of responses were quicker and 10% were slower) was 15 minutes 30 seconds, shorter than in January. This means the response time targets for purple calls were met.
For red calls, the median decreased to 8 minutes 54 seconds and the 90th percentile also decreased to 21 minutes 45 seconds. This means the response time targets for red calls were not met.
Figure 4: median time for defibrillator arrival, to commence CPR instruction, and to identify cardiac arrest (mm:ss), by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 4: a line chart showing the median time median time for defibrillator arrival has increased, while the median time to commence CPR instruction and to identify cardiac arrest has remained relatively stable.
Source: Welsh Ambulance Services University NHS Trust
[Note 1]: Detailed definitions for the measures are provided in the accompanying quality report.
Ambulance activity and performance measures, on StatsWales
The median time for defibrillator arrival was 5 minutes and 4 seconds. The median time to commence CPR instruction was 4 minutes and 27 seconds, and the median time to identify cardiac arrest was 2 minutes and 54 seconds.
Emergency departments
Activity
Figure 5: average attendances in emergency departments, and admissions to hospital resulting from attendances at major emergency departments per day, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 5: a line chart showing a generally increasing trend in attendances to emergency departments.
Source: Emergency department data set, DHCW
Emergency departments: attendances by age and sex, April 2016 onwards, 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 February there were just over 81,800 attendances to all emergency departments, an average of 2,923 attendances per day; this was 72 attendances more per day on average than in the previous month.
Just under 13,100 patients were admitted to hospital following attendance at major emergency departments. This was 11.5% lower than the previous month.
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 6: percentage of patients admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours at emergency departments, by month
Description of figure 6: a line chart showing the percentage of patients admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours at emergency departments has been relatively stable in recent years, between 60 and 70%.
Source: Emergency department data set, DHCW
In February, 63.7% of patients spent less than 4 hours in emergency departments from arrival until admission, transfer or discharge. This was higher than the previous month but remains low by historical standards.
The median waiting time was 2 hours and 51 minutes, down 3 minutes from the previous month. Waiting times vary by age, time of day and day of the week, with further detail available in the Trends in NHS urgent and emergency care activity report.
Figure 7: patients waiting more than 12 hours to be admitted, transferred or discharged at NHS emergency departments, by month
Description of figure 7: a line chart showing the number of patients waiting longer than 12 hours to be admitted, transferred or discharged at emergency departments has been relatively stable recently, at around 10,000 patients.
Source: Emergency department data set, DHCW
In February, 9,817 patients waited 12 hours or more. This was 1,555 (13.7%) less than in the previous month.
Outpatient appointments
Activity
Figure 8: average daily referrals for first outpatient appointment, by month
Description of figure 8: a line chart showing outpatient referrals, which has been fluctuating with an upwards trend.
Source: Outpatient Referral Dataset, DHCW
Outpatient referrals, April 2012 onwards, on StatsWales
An average of 4,456 referrals for first outpatient appointments were made per day in January. This is an increase of 7.8% (321 more referrals per day on average) compared to December.
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 9: pathways waiting more than a year for their first appointment, by month
Description of figure 9: a line chart showing the number of patient pathways waiting longer than a year has fallen considerably recently.
Source: Referral to treatment times, DHCW
In January, the number of pathways waiting longer than one year for their first outpatient appointment decreased by 31.8% compared to the previous month to just over 22,300. This was 78.2% lower than the peak in August 2022 and the lowest figure since September 2020.
Diagnostics and therapies
Activity
Figure 10: patient pathways waiting for diagnostic and therapy services, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 10: a line chart showing generally upward trends in pathways waiting for diagnostic and therapy services.
Source: Diagnostic and therapy services waiting times, DHCW
Therapy services: pathway waiting times, grouped weeks waiting, October 2009 onwards, on StatsWales
[Note 1]: From April 2024 audiology and weight management pathways were no longer reported in the therapies data.
In January there were just under 135,300 patient pathways waiting for diagnostics, a decrease of 1.5% compared with the previous month.
In January there were just over 55,700 patient pathways waiting for therapies, an increase of 1.4% compared with the previous month.
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 11: patient pathways waiting over the target time for diagnostic and therapy services, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 11: a line chart showing a fluctuating trend in diagnostics pathways waiting longer than 8 weeks and a recent downward trend in therapies pathways waiting longer than 14 weeks.
Source: Diagnostic and therapy services waiting times, DHCW
Therapy services: pathway waiting times, grouped weeks waiting, October 2009 onwards, on StatsWales
[Note 1]: From April 2024 audiology and weight management pathways were no longer reported in the therapies data, meaning they are not directly comparable with data up to March 2024.
In January, just over 48,300 pathways were waiting longer than the target time for diagnostics, an increase of 3.3% compared to December.
There were just under 5,300 therapies pathways waiting longer than the target time, an increase of 5.5%, and the highest figure since October 2024.
The median waiting time for diagnostic tests was 5.4 weeks, the same as in December, and for therapy services it was 3.9 weeks, 1 week shorter than in December.
Referral to treatment waiting times
Referral to treatment statistics cover open and closed pathways following referral by a GP or other medical practitioner to hospital for treatment. Open pathways are those that remain on the waiting list for treatment, whereas closed pathways are those removed.
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 statistician’s blog.
Performance
Targets
- No patients waiting longer than two years in most specialties by March 2023, and no patients waiting longer than one year in most specialties by Spring 2025 (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 12: patient pathways waiting to start treatment, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 12: a line chart showing recent falls in pathways waiting and those waiting longer than one year. Two year waits have been falling since early 2022.
Source: Referral to treatment times, DHCW
[Note 1]: Figures in the shaded area for the most recent month in this chart are provisional and are subject to change. The official data series ends in the previous month.
In January there were just over 713,000 patient pathways waiting to start treatment, a decrease from December (741,000). Just over 115,700 pathways were waiting more than one year in January, a decrease of 10.1% from last month. Just over 5,200 were waiting more than two years, 0.8% lower than last month and 92.6% lower than the peak in March 2022.
These official statistics are published with a lag of around seven weeks from the end of the reference period. However, given the interest in referral to treatment (RTT) waiting lists and the Welsh Government’s commitment to reducing the longest waits, there is public value in making data on this topic available earlier. We are therefore providing provisional estimates for the month ahead.
Provisional data indicate there were around 688,000 total pathways waiting at the end of February, of which 105,600 were waiting more than one year and 4,500 were waiting more than two years. These provisional estimates are subject to change before the official figures for February are released in April.
Headline measures for open pathways across the UK are not comparable. There are large differences in coverage between Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland statistics, meaning they should not be compared at all. With England, a broadly comparable number can be produced for Wales by removing some known non-consultant led pathways which are not counted in England.
On that basis, there are around 635,600 open pathways on consultant-led pathways in Wales, equivalent to 20 pathways for every 100 people. For England, the figure in January was 12 pathways for every 100 people. These comparisons are explored further in this Chief Statistician’s blog.
The number of patient pathways is not the same as the number of individual patients, because some people have multiple open pathways. Management information suggests there were around 557,900 individual patients on treatment waiting lists in Wales. Estimates for the number of individual patients waiting to start treatment by health board can be found in the NHS waiting lists: estimate of unique patients dataset on StatsWales.
Figure 13: percentage of patient pathways waiting less than 26 weeks, by month
Description of figure 13: a line chart showing the percentage of patient pathways waiting less than 26 weeks has been between 50% and 60% in recent years.
Source: Referral to treatment times, DHCW
Of the just over 713,000 patient pathways waiting to start treatment, by the end of January, 61.0% had been waiting less than 26 weeks. This was higher than the previous month, and the highest since June 2020.
Figure 14: patient pathways waiting more than 36 weeks, by month
Description of figure 14: a line chart showing the number of pathways waiting more than 36 weeks has fallen in recent months.
Source: Referral to treatment times, DHCW
In January, just over 202,700 patient pathways had been waiting more than 36 weeks. This was around 17,300 lower than in the previous month and the lowest figure since September 2020. This figure represents 28.4% of all pathways waiting to start treatment.
The median time waiting to start treatment in January was 17.8 weeks, 1.2 weeks shorter than the previous month, and the lowest figure since April 2020.
Figure 15: closed patient pathways, by month
Description of figure 15: a line chart showing that the number of patient pathways closed has more than doubled in the last five years.
Source: Referral to treatment times, DHCW
NHS waiting lists: closed referral to treatment pathways, September 2011 onwards
The number of patient pathways closed in January was just over 144,700, the highest figure on record. This was an average of 6,893 pathways closed per working day, and an increase of 996 patient pathways (or 16.9%) closed per working day from the previous month.
Hospital discharge delays
Hospital discharge delays occur when patients who are clinically ready for discharge cannot leave hospital because the necessary ongoing care and support or suitable accommodation is not yet accessible. The figures represent the number of adults who were ready to return home or move on to the next stage of care, that experienced a delay in their transfer of more than 48 hours. The data are a snapshot of delays on a given day each month, meaning they do not tell us the total number of delays over the month. Figures are available for the number of individual delays and the corresponding total number of days delayed experienced by those patients.
Figure 16: number of pathway of care delays and the total days delayed delays, by month [Note 1]
Description of figure 16: line charts showing the number of delays and the total days delayed are both showing a downward trend.
Source: Pathway of Care Delays, DHCW
Delayed hospital discharges: total pathway of care delays and total days delayed, on StatsWales.
[Note 1] The vertical axes of these charts are on different scales.
In February there were just over 1,400 pathway of care delays on the day the data were collected, an increase compared to the figure in January. The total cumulative days delayed for those patients was just over 60,600, a decrease compared to the figure in January.
Cancer services
Activity
Figure 17: closed suspected cancer pathways in the month, by month and outcome
Description of figure 17: a line chart showing the number of patient pathways informed they do not have cancer, which fluctuates, and the number starting their first definitive treatment, which is relatively stable.
Source: Suspected Cancer Pathway, DHCW
In January, 2,074 pathways started cancer treatment, 59 more than in December. 14,215 pathways were closed after patients were informed they did not have cancer, an increase of 4%. There were 16,521 new suspected cancer pathways, an increase of 2,184 (15.2%) from December. In recent years the number of new pathways opened has been relatively stable.
Performance
Target
- At least 75% of patients should start treatment within 62 days (without suspensions) of first being suspected of cancer.
Figure 18: percentage of pathways where the patient started their first definitive treatment within the target time, by month
Description of figure 18: a line chart showing the percentage of patients starting treatment within 62 days of a suspicion of cancer has generally fluctuated between 50% and 65% in recent years, with no discernible trend.
Source: Suspected Cancer Pathway, DHCW
In January, 57.0% of pathways started their first definitive treatment within 62 days of first being suspected of cancer. This was 3.7 percentage points lower than the previous month.
Focus on Local Health Boards
Local health board performance is covered in the quarterly release NHS performance for Welsh local health boards. For the months this is not produced, summary analyses will be provided in this section. These analyses are on a health board provider basis, not health board of residence. This means patients resident in one health board but on waiting lists provided by other health boards are counted in those organisations’ figures. This is consistent with the performance management framework in Wales, in that standards and targets are assessed on a provider basis.
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
Official statistics status
All official statistics should show the standards of the Code of Practice for Statistic (UK Statistics Authority).
These are accredited official statistics. They were independently reviewed by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR) in July 2012. They comply with the standards of trustworthiness, quality, and value in the Code of Practice for Statistics.
It is Welsh Government’s responsibility to maintain compliance with the standards expected of accreditation. If we become concerned about whether these statistics are still meeting the appropriate standards, we will discuss any concerns with OSR promptly. Accreditation can be cancelled or suspended at any point when the highest standards are not maintained, and reinstated when standards are restored.
Accredited official statistics (OSR) are called National Statistics in the Statistics and Registration Service Act 2007.
Statement of compliance with the Code of Practice for Statistics
Our statistical practice is regulated by the OSR OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of official statistics should adhere to.
All of our statistics are produced and published in accordance with a number of statements and protocols to enhance trustworthiness, quality and value. These are set out in the Welsh Government’s Statement of Compliance.
These accredited official statistics demonstrate the standards expected around trustworthiness, quality and public value in the following ways.
Trustworthiness
These statistics are compiled from a range of sources derived from administrative data systems in use across the NHS in Wales. Data on the 111 service, 999 ambulance calls and ambulance response times are provided by the Wales Ambulance Services University NHS Trust (WAST), and all other data sources are collected by the Welsh Local Health Boards and provided to Digital Health and Care Wales (DHCW) to enable them to be collated at a national level.
The data collections are overseen by the Welsh Information Standards Board (WISB), which is the custodian of the Information Standards Assurance Process. WISB mandates data collections through the NHS and Local Heath Boards, appraises information standards and provides assurance on matters related to confidentiality and consent.
The published figures are compiled by professional analysts using the latest available data and applying methods using their professional judgement and analytical skillset.
These statistics are pre-announced on the Statistics and Research area of the Welsh Government website. Access to the data during processing is restricted to those involved in the production of the statistics, quality assurance and for operational purposes. Pre-release access is restricted to eligible recipients in line with the Code of Practice (UK Statistics Authority).
Quality
Statistics published by Welsh Government adhere to the Statistical Quality Management Strategy which supplements the Quality pillar of the Code of Practice for Statistics and the European Statistical System principles of quality for statistical outputs.
Data standards and definitions are established by the WISB. Guidance is issued to the data providing organisations and training provided to staff responsible for collecting the data at source. DHCW collates and validates health board level data and queries anomalous and missing data directly with the health boards. Before validated datasets are provided by DHCW to Welsh Government, all data are signed off by health boards. DHCW provides validated datasets to Welsh Government, where analysts process the data to produce the aggregate statistics in the format required for publication. Welsh Government undertakes final validation checks which can be queried with DHCW and the health boards before publication. The statistical release is signed off by senior statisticians before publication.
Value
The purposes of this statistical release and the accompanying data published on StatsWales are: to provide evidence for policy development; to inform the media and wider public about activity and performance in the Welsh NHS; to enable service providers such as Local Health Boards and WAST to monitor their own performance.
Reliable statistics on the volume of activity undertaken in the NHS, the size of waiting lists, ambulance response times and emergency department and cancer waiting times are vital to inform users about the state of NHS services and the performance of the Welsh government and the Local Health Boards. These services have a significant impact on citizens’ lives and these topics feature prominently in media coverage and political discourse.
The information published here also supports the Welsh Government’s long term plan for health and social care: A Healthier Wales.
The timeliness of the data provides the most recent update using reliable data.
You are welcome to contact us directly with any comments about how we meet these standards. Alternatively, you can contact OSR by emailing regulation@statistics.gov.uk or via the OSR website.
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 well-being 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 well-being assessments and local well-being plans.
Next update
23 April 2026
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.
