Boris Johnson accused of ‘shameful spinning’ of cancer care targets | Health


Boris Johnson has been accused of a “shameful spinning” of key pledges on cancer care in an attempt to distract from the NHS’s record 6 million-strong backlog of people on waiting lists.

The prime minister used a visit to a cancer centre in Kent to unveil plans for what were portrayed as two new care standards that would ensure people in England with the disease get diagnosed more quickly.

But opposition parties condemned the move as a “pathetic rehashing of old pledges” and a cynical attempt to try to persuade the media to reduce their focus on a row between the government and NHS chiefs over how quickly hospitals can be expected to treat the hundreds of thousands of patients who have been waiting between one and two years for surgery.

The spat overshadowed and forced the postponement of Monday’s launch of the long-awaited “elective recovery plan”, which was due to set out the government’s plans to tackle the backlog. NHS England is now expected to finally publish the plan – which was originally due in early December – on Tuesday.

However, it quickly emerged that Johnson’s pledge that 75% of people who develop cancer will be diagnosed early by 2028 matched an objective first announced by NHS England in its long-term plan in January 2019, when Theresa May was still in Downing Street.

The shadow health secretary, Wes Streeting, pointed out that a second promise – that 75% of suspected cancer patients will be told if they have the disease or not within 28 days of being urgently referred by a GP – was an NHS standard that was already in place.

“This is an existing target that was introduced in April and has never been met,” Streeting said. NHS England figures covering April to November 2021 show the 75% target was not met during those eight months, and that in November just 71.3% of people displaying potential symptoms of cancer were told within 28 days that they had or did not have it.

Johnson also said that by March next year the NHS would have reduced the backlog of cancer patients who have been waiting more than two months for cancer treatment to pre-pandemic levels.

Boris Johnson promises tough new targets to tackle NHS backlog – video
Boris Johnson promises tough new targets to tackle NHS backlog – video

But in a Commons debate on the elective recovery plan, Streeting told MPs that the NHS had pledged to give cancer patients their “first definitive treatment” within 62 days back in late 2009, when Labour was in power. The target had not been hit since 2015, he said, adding: “Isn’t this another example of the Conservatives lowering standards for patients because they consistently fail to meet them?”

Streeting said: “The prime minister announced what he called two ‘tough new cancer targets.’ One is a reannouncement and the other is actually weaker than the existing target. The Conservatives are lowering standards for patients because they failed to meet them.”

Macmillan Cancer Support also noted that the claimed new target was nothing of the sort. “It’s welcome to see a focus on clearing the backlog of people waiting more than two months to start cancer treatment, but this is a target that’s been promised previously and repeatedly missed,” said Eve Byrne, the…



Read More: Boris Johnson accused of ‘shameful spinning’ of cancer care targets | Health

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

mahjong slot

Live News

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.