Health Services: Waiting Lists

(asked on 20th February 2026) - View Source

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what assessment his Department has made of trends in the level of regional variations in reducing NHS waiting lists.


Answered by
Karin Smyth Portrait
Karin Smyth
Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)
This question was answered on 2nd March 2026

The Department and NHS England regularly monitor regional and trust level variation in National Health Service waiting lists to address variation in performance, so patients can expect to receive high quality care in a timely way, wherever they live. We are committed to returning to the NHS constitutional standard that 92% of all patients wait no longer than 18 weeks from referral to consultant-led treatment by March 2029. Our Reforming elective care for patients plan, published in January 2025, sets out how the NHS will reform elective care services equitably across all trusts and regions.

As an interim goal, NHS England’s Operational Planning Guidance 2025/26 has set the national ambition for 65% of patients waiting no longer than 18 weeks for treatment, with every trust expected to deliver a minimum 5% improvement in performance. In the Medium-Term Planning Framework, every trust by March 2027 is expected to deliver a minimum of 7% improvement in 18-week performance or a minimum of 65%, whichever is greater.

To support this improvement across all trusts, there is a robust performance management process in place. The new NHS Oversight Framework 2025/26 ensures that there is public accountability for performance and NHS England national and regional teams work with systems and providers to support improvement. There is a specific process in place to identify, intervene and support the providers whose performance on elective waiting lists is most challenged, led by NHS England national and regional team.

Reticulating Splines