Covid: Record high 5.3m on NHS waiting list despite hospitals admitting more patients

Staff at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London. Picture date: Tuesday March 23, 2021.
Stefan Rousseau
Charlie Bayliss

By Charlie Bayliss


Published: 08/07/2021

- 11:20

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 11:05

The huge backlog caused by Covid-19 means millions across the country are waiting for treatment

A staggering 5.3m people are on the NHS waiting list in England - the highest figure since records began.

While the number of people admitted to hospital for surgery and routine treatment is getting back to pre-pandemic levels, the huge backlog caused by Covid-19 is still reaching record highs.


The total number of people admitted for routine treatment in hospitals in England in May was 242,064 – more than four times the number a year earlier (54,550), when hospitals were treating thousands of Covid patients.

Before the pandemic struck, the NHS admitted 295,881 people for routine treatment in May 2019, suggesting the health service is getting close to dealing with pre-pandemic numbers of patients.

However, the overall number of people in England waiting to start routine hospital treatment has risen to its highest levels since records began in August 2007, NHS England data shows.

It comes after NHS Providers chief executive Chris Hopson said there were risks if England eases all coronavirus restrictions later this month.

The NHS in England under severe pressure, with more than 5m on the waiting list.
The NHS in England under severe pressure, with more than 5m on the waiting list.
Peter Byrne

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We need to be realistic and we need to be open and honest about the fact that there are risks if we relax these restrictions and there will be consequences.

“The NHS won’t be able to do everything given the demand pressures it has got and the fact that we have got reduced capacity in terms of both beds and staff numbers.” He said there would be “very significant” pressure on the NHS and “we will have to dial back on elective recovery”.

The data shows the NHS is currently making progress on long waits, with the number of people having to wait more than 52 weeks to start treatment standing at 336,733 in May 2021 – down almost 50,000 from 385,490 the previous month.

The figure is around 13 times the number waiting a year earlier, in May 2020, which was 26,029. The number of people waiting more than 18 weeks for treatment is also down from 1.81 million in April to 1.73 million in May, a drop of nearly 83,000.

NHS medical director Professor Stephen Powis said: “Despite the huge disruption we have seen to care caused by the pandemic and the more than 405,000 Covid patients in our hospitals over the last 15 months, it is reassuring to see in today’s figures significant reductions in waits for routine operations, and for the first time this year, a reduction in the number of patients waiting more than 18 weeks for treatment.

Tracey Loftis, head of policy and public affairs at Versus Arthritis

Thousands of people with arthritis are silently bearing the brunt of this crisis as they wait for life-changing hip and knee operations

“All the while, NHS staff have dealt with rising numbers of A&E attendances while continuing to roll out the NHS Covid vaccination programme and I would urge anyone who needs a routine operation to come forward, and anyone who needs urgent care to go to NHS 111 online or call 111 so that the best option for you can be determined.”

Responding to the high overall waiting list, Tracey Loftis, head of policy and public affairs at Versus Arthritis, said: “Thousands of people with arthritis are silently bearing the brunt of this crisis as they wait for life-changing hip and knee operations.

“Joint replacements are in the category of planned surgery and treatment that has been worst affected and slowest to restart over the last year, all too often considered not serious or life-altering enough to be front of the queue.”

Stella Vig, council member at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, said surgical hubs are needed across the country to treat the millions of people waiting for hospital treatment. She said the data showed an increase in very long waits of more than two years for hospital treatment, with 3,927 patients in May.

Charge nurse Katy Currie sets up equipment in one of the treatment rooms in the Emergency Department at the new Royal Hospital for Children and Young People Edinburgh.
Charge nurse Katy Currie sets up equipment in one of the treatment rooms in the Emergency Department at the new Royal Hospital for Children and Young People Edinburgh.
Jane Barlow

“Behind the stats are patients waiting for planned surgery such as breast reconstruction surgery following a mastectomy, or a cochlear implant to improve their hearing,” she said.

“These types of procedures are life-changing. With the rest of the country looking forward to restrictions lifting on July 19, our patients have the right to expect a date in their diary for their operation.”

Shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said: “More than five million people on the waiting list means record numbers waiting in pain or distress for treatment.

“We know that hospitals are already under extreme pressure this summer and as Covid cases continue to rise, this is only going to get worse.

“(Health Secretary) Sajid Javid has failed to put forward a plan to bring infections down, to clear the backlog or to support our NHS in this difficult period, instead he’s proposing a top-down reorganisation of our health service when it is under more pressure than ever before.”

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