By Lucy Ashton
The months-long wait for cervical cancer checks is “giving women sleepless nights”, Scottish Labour has warned, after it emerged some are waiting more than eight months for further checks.
Some patients waiting for a colposcopy – the cervix examination that is a follow up to an abnormal smear test and can help identify cervical cancer – have been left in limbo for months.
In NHS Tayside, the longest wait for a colposcopy was a staggering 266 days.
Others in NHS Borders and NHS Ayrshire and Arran waited 259 days and 238 days respectively.
The damning figures may not capture the extent all patients are waiting as the 2024 data is not yet complete.
Average waits for patients have also spiralled, with four health boards reporting average waiting times of more than two months in 2024 in the data recorded so far.
In NHS Borders, the longest average waiting time was three times longer than in 2019, while in NHS Tayside it was two and a half times longer.
The damning figures may not capture the extent all patients are waiting as the 2024 data is not yet complete.
The wait times are not directly comparable due to health boards’ varied recording processes but show the longest average waiting times rising in all but one health board, NHS Highland.
Jackie Baillie, Scottish Labour’s Health spokesperson, said: “For those who have been referred for a follow up test, every day without an appointment is another day filled with anxiety and stress followed by a sleepless night.
“Routine checks prevent tragedy but they only work if the results are quickly processed and at-risk patients identified.
“Cancer doesn’t wait – the SNP must ensure that every woman who gets tested is confident that the NHS is there for her if she needs it.”
Average waits for colposcopies by health board (days)*
|
Health Board |
2019 |
2020 |
2021 |
2022 |
2023 |
2024 |
change 2024-2019 |
|
NHS Ayrshire & Arran |
68 |
102 |
70 |
66 |
79 |
91 |
34% |
|
NHS Borders |
26 |
43 |
32 |
23 |
35 |
78 |
200% |
|
NHS Dumfries & Galloway |
40 |
88 |
71 |
50 |
46 |
76 |
90% |
|
NHS Fife |
Not provided |
||||||
|
NHS Forth Valley |
25 |
39 |
37 |
49 |
42 |
49 |
96% |
|
NHS Grampian |
21 |
14 |
28 |
28 |
35 |
35 |
67% |
|
NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde |
43 |
61 |
146 |
183 |
178 |
57 |
33% |
|
NHS Highland |
60 |
98 |
88 |
67 |
26 |
30 |
-50% |
|
NHS Lanarkshire** |
Not provided in a comparable format |
||||||
|
NHS Lothian |
23 |
143 |
24 |
21 |
20 |
24 |
4% |
|
NHS Orkney |
Not available |
||||||
|
NHS Shetland |
32 |
34 |
39 |
29 |
32 |
33 |
3% |
|
NHS Tayside |
28 |
14 |
42 |
77 |
91 |
70 |
150% |
|
NHS Western Isles |
20 |
32 |
25 |
22 |
34 |
29 |
45% |
Longest waits for colposcopies by health board (days)*
|
Health Board |
2019 |
2020 |
2021 |
2022 |
2023 |
2024 |
change 2024-2019 |
|
NHS Ayrshire & Arran |
170 |
216 |
224 |
185 |
250 |
238 |
40% |
|
NHS Borders |
77 |
595 |
273 |
84 |
161 |
259 |
236% |
|
NHS Dumfries & Galloway |
154 |
309 |
289 |
264 |
237 |
232 |
51% |
|
NHS Fife |
Not provided |
||||||
|
NHS Forth Valley |
79 |
280 |
105 |
448 |
103 |
132 |
67% |
|
NHS Grampian |
49 |
63 |
63 |
56 |
84 |
70 |
43% |
|
NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde |
411 |
80 |
307 |
279 |
425 |
197 |
-52% |
|
NHS Highland |
161 |
381 |
194 |
219 |
260 |
96 |
-40% |
|
NHS Lanarkshire** |
Not provided in a comparable format |
||||||
|
NHS Lothian |
108 |
369 |
362 |
81 |
144 |
92 |
-15% |
|
NHS Orkney |
Not available |
||||||
|
NHS Shetland |
86 |
178 |
309 |
111 |
116 |
173 |
101% |
|
NHS Tayside |
175 |
35 |
119 |
287 |
448 |
266 |
52% |
|
NHS Western Isles |
42 |
273 |
57 |
62 |
92 |
91 |
117% |
*Please note that some health boards have provided data relating to patients referred for a colposcopy following cervical screening, whereas others have given data for all referrals to an outpatient colposcopy clinic.
Data for 2024 is incomplete and days have been rounded.
Some Health Boards have pointed out that longer waits will include cases where patients have cancelled appointments or had their appointment rescheduled for clinical reasons.
**NHS Lanarkshire could only provide data on the number of outpatient completed waits by time period. The most recent data for 2024 showed that 48.5 per cent of completed waits were within the 85 to 126 day period, whilst 41.9 per cent were within the 127 to 182 day period.
Source: Scottish Labour FOI.
More cat call politicking. That of course is not to say that there could be room for improvement on waiting times – especially with things like cancer.
It’s a no win situation for the NHS. It never gets the praise that it deserves. It is, and has to be a huge machine, joined up between departments, and as we know, budgets are continually under threat. Of course Labour’s solution is to privatise swathes of the MHS. They are ideologically committed to that.
One Vale of Leven Hospital had an issue with hospital cleaning being privatised some years ago. Was an absolute disaster after many folks died needlessly through poor cleaning services. And so people lost loved ones needlessly on the infection of Labour cleaning privatisation. But of course in reminding folks of this I suppose I am indulging in the thing that we do not address.
With our country at war and absolutely huge amounts being spent on weaponry more cuts are coming. So no doubt we will hear more from local labour politicians as to how it is all the SNP’s fault. But £bn a year to Ukraine for the next 100 years and an extra defence spend of £13.7bn a year, this year alone, needs to be paid for,
Tesco used to advertise with the slogan that when it’s gone, it’s gone. NHS privatisation is underway, much much more advanced in England but coming here and its Labour’s big plan now accelerating due to the war funding requirements.
Any way. the politico’s cat call and the hapless get what they get. Me, I think, like the USA where folks are free to buy as much health care as they need, one can already see how Labour’s two tier pricing will play out.