Cancer charities joined forces to call for a longer-term national strategy to improve services after 9,000 people waited too long for treatment last year. Mark Isherwood, chair of the Senedd's public accounts committee, raised an Audit Wales report which found cancer services have consistently failed to hit a 75 per cent target for patients to start treatment within 62 days. Lowri Griffiths, chair of the Wales Cancer Alliance, a coalition of charities established nearly 20 years ago, said she was saddened and disappointed by the findings.
The director of policy at Tenovus told the committee: “We’ve long held the view that some of the governance arrangements around cancer services, especially since the development of the quality statement , have not been fit for purpose.” Hannah Buckingham, of Macmillan Cancer Support, a vice-chair of the alliance, said performance against the 62-day target shows the system cannot keep up with demand. “It isn’t working for far too many people across Wales,” she told the committee, describing the impact of delays in diagnosis as devastating for cancer patients and their families.
“Not just on their physical health but their mental and emotional health as well.” Ms Buckingham said: “In 2024, we saw, for example, 9,000 people across Wales wait too long to start treatment on that 62-day pathway which is just not good enough quite frankly.” She added that it is distressing for staff not being able to deliver timely care for patients, calling for a strategic approach to tackling workforce shortages.
Simon Scheeres, a fellow vice-chair of the alliance representing Cancer Research UK, said the report underlined the need for a longer-term, more cohesive strategy, raising concerns about a confusing plethora of quality statements, improvement plans and other initiatives. Warning deprivation has a profound impact in Wales, he told Senedd members that death rates are 50 per cent higher in the most deprived groups compared with the least. Lauren Marks, of Young Lives vs Cancer, described the cancer improvement plan as lacking detail on the specific needs of children and young people.
Ms Marks warned the 62-day target, which measures the time between first being suspected of having cancer and starting treatment, does not capture young people’s experiences..
Health
Call for long-term cancer strategy as 9,000 wait too long for treatment
Cancer charities joined forces in the Senedd to call for a longer-term national strategy to improve services after 9,000 people waited too long for treatment last year.