Rishi Sunak could miss NHS waiting list target over strikes, says Victoria Atkins

Media caption,

Heath Secretary Victoria Atkins says avoiding a winter NHS crisis is her number one priority

Rishi Sunak may miss his target to cut NHS waiting lists if doctors go ahead with their plans to strike, the new health secretary has warned.

Victoria Atkins said strikes by doctors and nurses had led to "1.1 million appointments having to be rescheduled".

Speaking to the BBC, she said avoiding a crisis was her "number one priority this winter".

The NHS could face extra pressure this winter, due to record waiting lists and warnings over fewer extra beds.

Ms Atkins told BBC One's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg the government's target to cut NHS waiting lists was one of the prime minister's Rtop priorities.

But she warned it may not be met, unless doctors dropped plans to take industrial action over the coming months.

"We are very much looking to meet those targets [to cut waiting lists], but I need the consultants to pass this settlement that we've put forward [and] I hope very much that doctors in training will be able to reach a settlement with us as well," Ms Atkins said.

When asked whether Mr Sunak's promise could be still achieved even if strikes went ahead, Ms Atkins said "we are doing everything we can".

"Again, I would very much ask consultants to look at the settlement because actually it's a very modern contract which I hope they'll find acceptable," she said.

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The waiting list for planned NHS treatment in England rose to a record high of 7.77 million in September.

Ms Atkins, appointed to the role at the recent reshuffle, went on to say that planning for winter "started much earlier than usual" as an extra 5,000 beds have been created.

She said: "The NHS has been working very hard to prepare for this winter."

Research by the Health Foundation, external think tank suggested industrial action by consultants and junior doctors had lengthened the waiting list by around 210,000, which is 3% of the list.

It comes as consultant doctors in NHS England are considering a deal that could potentially resolve the bitter pay dispute.

Ms Atkins has struck a more conciliatory tone and suggested there could be progress in talks over non-pay issues like rotas and conditions.

Her predecessor Stephen Barclay previously described the doctor's union as taking a "militant" stance.

Royal College of Nursing Chief Nurse Professor Nicola Ranger said: "Cold months bring particular challenges, but nursing staff are working in dire situations year-round."

She said staff "cannot deliver the care they want for their patients. They are battling against record waiting lists, longer waits for ambulances, and staff shortages on every shift."

NHS reform

Lib Dem treasury spokesperson Sarah Olney said the UK was "flying blind into another winter crisis and Atkins would not even deny it".

"This Conservative government has already broken its promise on recruiting new GPs, now it looks likely that the promise to cut waiting lists will also be broken," she said.

Shadow business secretary James Reynolds accused the government of planning "real terms cuts in the next parliament" for the NHS, as part of the recent Autumn Statement.

Labour has promised a major workforce expansion to help cut waiting lists and improve care if it wins the next general election.

Mr Reynolds said the health service also needs to be modernised as "one in five [NHS] trusts are still using the same diagnostic equipment, the same scanners, as they had put in in the last Labour government".

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