Add thelocalreport.in As A
Trusted Source
brits being forced to wait a long time for care As demand for weight loss jabs and autism and adhd assessment takes up NHS Waiting list according to a new report.
Size of the NHS community care waiting list for children England The study by the Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation found there was a 58 per cent increase by 2022, compared with a 23 per cent increase for adults.
More than half (55 percent) of children and youth on the list are waiting for community pediatric services for children with developmental problems or disabilities.
Services include neurodevelopmental evaluation, including diagnosis and management of conditions such as autism and ADHD.
The report said: “This may partly explain the overall increase in waiting lists for children and young people’s services, as we have previously reported an increase in demand for referrals and assessment for these conditions.”

The study further found that 21 percent of children and youth on waiting lists are waiting for speech and language therapy services, such as for patients with problems with communication, eating, drinking and swallowing.
About 6 percent of children on the waiting list are waiting for physiotherapy, 6 percent for audiology services and 6 percent for occupational therapy.
Overall, the wait for children and young people is much longer than for adults, with almost one in four waiting more than a year and one in 15 waiting more than two years.
The report also looked at adults and found that 44 percent of people on community waiting lists are waiting for musculoskeletal services such as bone, joint or muscle pain.
However, the largest percentage increase of any community service was in weight management services for adults (512 percent).
The report said: “Although the absolute increase was not as high for community pediatric or musculoskeletal services, the rapid change is noteworthy, as it may be related to the recent increase in demand for GLP-1 drugs (weight loss drugs).” monjaro And Ozempic For weight loss,
The report also said that NHS staff numbers are much higher in hospitals than in the community.
Between 2010 and 2025, the number of nurses working in community settings will increase by 1 percent, while the number of adult hospital nurses will increase by 42 percent and the number of children’s hospital nurses will increase by 93 percent.
Jessica Morris, Nuffield Trust partner and author of the briefing, said: “Children across the country are waiting too long for the community care they so desperately need.
“Affected families may feel as if life is on hold while they are stuck waiting for assistance.
“To take just one example, many of the children on the list are in urgent need of life-changing speech and language therapy due to difficulties communicating or swallowing.
“Our aging population, along with the increasing number of people suffering from long-term conditions, means that more and more people will need support from community health services in the years to come.
“Government health plans recognize the importance of community services and include laudable targets to expand them, but our analysis shows how difficult it will be to achieve that target when existing community services are already at their knees.”