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Wales' first minister has been accused of missing a key promise on NHS waiting times.

In December, Eluned Morgan pledged to cut the numbers waiting two years or more for planned treatments from 24,000 to "about 8,000" by spring.

Despite falling to the lowest point since April 2021, March's figure stood at 8,389 with the majority – 5,747 – in the health board for north Wales, Betsi Cadwaladr.

Opposition parties said this meant the target had been missed.

There was a drop from February's figure of 15,500 amid a £50m investment but the figure is still well above NHS England which had just 147 people waiting two years or more.

Health Secretary Jeremy Miles praised Swansea Bay, Hywel Dda, and Powys health boards for not having any patients waiting more than two years for treatment

The Welsh government said its £50m investment led to more than 5,000 treatments, 2,000 diagnostic tests, 6,000 outpatient appointments and 2,100 neurodevelopmental assessments, eliminating three-year waiting lists.

Last month, Health Secretary Jeremy Miles said he was sure the NHS would come close to the 8,000 figure.

On Thursday, he praised Swansea Bay, Hywel Dda, and Powys health boards for having no patients waiting more than two years for treatment.

Miles said the focus was now cutting the waiting list by 200,000 this year and restoring an eight-week maximum wait for diagnostic tests by March 2026.

While calling the goal "ambitious", he thanked "NHS staff for their hard work getting us to this point".

With just under a year until the next Senedd election and with the NHS likely to be a key issue, the stakes were high.

However, Plaid Cymru's health spokesman Mabon ap Gwynfor accused the Welsh government of already missing a series of targets and then "moving the goalposts and still missing".

The Conservatives said: "The Welsh Labour government is still missing its cancer targets and no-one at all should be waiting two years for treatment or over 12 hours in A&E, let alone over 10,000 patients."

The Welsh Liberal Democrats said: "Two-year-long waiting lists for NHS treatment are unacceptable, given England virtually wiped out waits of this length several years ago, serious questions remain about how Labour have managed the NHS in Wales."

When asked if the target had been met, Miles said: "When we spoke a month ago I said I was pretty sure that we'd get pretty close to it and I think that's where we are."

He said by the end of the Senedd term, the Welsh government wants to make sure no-one is waiting two years.

Although numbers dropped from 24,000 to 8,400, new patients have continued joining the list, Miles said.

He added that around 65,000 people have received extra treatments, and if targets aren't met, funds can be reallocated within the NHS.

Sarah Thyer
Sarah Thyer paid for her own operation abroad when she was told she would be waiting more than two years to have it done in Wales

The extra funding came too late for some, such as Sarah Thyer, who paid £8,000 for hip surgery in Lithuania after facing a two-year wait.

Ms Thyer, 60, from Sketty, Swansea, enjoyed an active life as a charity fundraiser until her left hip deteriorated quickly at the start of 2024.

"It was agony, so much so I had to use a stick. I couldn't do the activities I usually did like sea swimming and cycling," she said.

"I had to give up my job because I couldn't physically do what I needed to do."

Having osteoarthritis, Ms Thyer knew she would need to a hip replacement, having undergone surgery on her right hip in 2017.

Back then she had waited about eight months for the operation, but was told this time it would be at least triple that.

"You feel completely frustrated… because every day you're struggling," she said.

"To be told you've got another two years after already being on [the list] for about 40 weeks is just depressing because it's not just the pain, it affects your whole life – it was heart-breaking."

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