OVER 5,000 more patients joined the waiting list for routine treatment at the Mid and South Essex NHS Trust in August, figures reveal.

NHS England figures show 113,602 patients were waiting for non-urgent consultant-led care at the trust at the end of August – five per cent more than 107,740 the month before.

The figure was also an increase of 19 per cent on the 95,120 on the waiting list in August last year.

Across England, the number of people waiting for treatment rose by 109,000 from 5.6 million in July to 5.7 million in August – the highest number since records began in August 2007.

Siva Anandaciva, chief analyst at the King’s Fund, said the upcoming Spending Review must address the pile-up of maintenance issues with NHS buildings and staffing challenges within the service, or “risk undermining efforts to reduce the waiting list backlog”.

He said: “The Government has announced significant, additional funding to support NHS services, but hasn’t yet delivered on promises to increase capital investment in buildings and equipment, or provided the funding required to train and develop the staff needed to address chronic workforce shortages."

NHS rules say patients referred for non-urgent consultant-led elective care should start treatment within 18 weeks.

But the figures show 36,345 people on the waiting list in August had been waiting longer than this for treatment – up from 32,453 in July and down from 48,175 in August last year.

Of them, 4,502 had been waiting more than a year for treatment, including 198 who had been waiting for at least two years.

NHS England said the health service carried out 1.1 million elective procedures in August despite admitting 23,000 Covid patients, while major A&Es treated more than 1.4 million people during September.

Professor Stephen Powis, NHS national medical director, added: “There is no doubt the NHS is running hot, with the highest ever number of patients seen in A&E in September, 14 times as many Covid patients in hospital compared to the same month last year and a record 999 ambulance calls.

“But despite the busiest September on record, NHS staff have moved heaven and earth to make the best possible use of additional investment delivering millions more tests, checks, treatments and operations.

“That is why it is really important people do not delay seeking help from the NHS if they feel unwell.”