Advising with empathy and experience

Highest delays for rescheduled surgery for ten years.

More than 5,000 NHS patients in England were not treated within 28 days of their operation being cancelled in the year to April 2016 - the highest figure for ten years.

During the same period, nearly 75,000 NHS operations in England were postponed at the last minute, also a ten-year high, NHS figures show.

Under the NHS constitution, cancelled operations are supposed to be rescheduled within 28 days or the patient's treatment must be funded at a time and hospital of their choice.

This affects patients who have had their operation cancelled at the last minute because of non-clinical reasons, such as beds or staff being unavailable.

The NHS England figures show that 6.8% of patients waited more than 28 days to be treated after their cancelled operations in 2015-16.

President of the Royal College of Surgeons, Clare Marx, said: "This is disappointing and is yet another indication of the pressure the NHS is under. Situations where patients have to wait longer for their treatment are highly stressful for them and their families and, in some cases, their condition could deteriorate."

Clare Marx said it was vital that access to healthcare should be provided at a time when patients could benefit most from the result.

She added: "There are likely to be a number of factors behind this rise that the government and NHS need to continue to tackle, including pressures in emergency departments, staffing shortages, and a shortage of free beds due to rising delayed transfers of care.”

An NHS England spokesman said the proportion of all patients having their operations cancelled at the last minute remained under 1%, in spite of record numbers of operations being scheduled.

He said: “Hospitals should continue to ensure that every effort is made to reschedule cancelled operations as soon as possible."