A HOSPITAL trust has reduced its longest waiting times by 90 per cent, new figures show.
As part of an effort to clear the backlog caused by the coronavirus pandemic, NHS England committed in February to ending waits of more than two years.
On July 3, the latest available data, there were 28 patients waiting this long for routine treatment at the University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust, down 89 per cent from 246 at the end of February.
Across England, the number of patients waiting two years or more fell from a peak of 23,778 in January to 3,548 at the start of July.
Professor Stephen Powis, national medical director for NHS England, said: "These figures show our hard working teams across the country are making good progress in addressing the Covid backlogs, with record numbers of diagnostic tests and checks in May and fewer people facing the longest waits for elective care."
But he warned that more work is needed for the NHS to catch up.
He said: “There is no doubt the NHS still faces significant pressures, from rising Covid admissions, thousands of staff absences due to the virus, the heatwave, and record demand for ambulances and emergency care."
The King's Fund think tank welcomed the figures, but cautioned that the NHS remains in a "state of steady crisis".
Danielle Jefferies, policy analyst at the organisation, said: "Thanks to the huge efforts of NHS staff, significant progress has been made in reducing the number of people facing waits of two years or more for planned hospital treatment.
"But the overall waiting list has continued to grow, and the number of people waiting more than a year is also rising."
Despite the fall in extremely long waits, the latest available data shows 332,000 patients across England had been on treatment waiting lists for longer than a year as of May, including 6,817 patients at the Sussex University Hospitals Trust.
Nationally, this was an increase of 21,000 from December.
Ms Jeffries added the new government will face difficult decisions when it comes to the NHS and "will need to be honest with the public about the standards of care they can expect".
As of May, 108,833 people were waiting to be treated at the Sussex University Hospitals Trust, with a record 6.6 million people waiting across England as a whole.
Minister of State for Healthand Lewes MP Maria Caulfield called the figures "great news".
She said: “NHS staff have been working incredibly hard to bust the Covid backlogs and have treated more than 15 million patients in the last year.
“Our groundbreaking Community Diagnostic Centres have delivered over 1.1 million additional checks since July 2021, and the number of people waiting more than two years for treatment has dropped by more than 80 per cent since February."
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