HealthPortsmouth

Portsmouth sees waiting lists drop by 6055 in November

By 16/01/2026March 22nd, 2026No Comments
NHS Hospital

Portsmouth sees waiting lists drop by 6055 in November – as England sees second biggest drop in the waiting list in 15 years.

Amanda Martin MP today thanked NHS staff in Queen Alexandra Hospital for their hard work in continuing to get waiting lists down, as the Labour government marked a year since the publication of its Elective Reform Plan designed to cut waits.

Across England, the NHS saw the waiting list fall by more than 86,000 in November to 7.31 million, as new data today shows staff faced record demand in 2025.

The progress came despite the NHS’s busiest ever year, with 27.8 million A&E attendances in 2025 – over 367,000 up on 2024, with 2.33 million attendances in December alone.

In the year since the Elective Reform Plan was launched, Labour have brought in record investment and real modernisation to cut waiting lists – including creating more evening and weekend clinics, new and expanded community diagnostic centres and surgical hubs, crack teams of experts being sent to 20 hospital trusts across England with the highest levels of economic inactivity, and cutting unnecessary appointments by sending patients “straight to test” rather than multiple clinic visits.

That includes Queen Alexandra Hospital which is helping care for patients in the new facilities within the Emergency Department. But Amanda Martin warned that winter pressures continue to persist as hospitals battle the flu and urged anyone eligible in Portsmouth North that it’s not too late to take up the flu vaccine to protect themselves and others.

Amanda Martin, Labour MP for Portsmouth North, said: 

“NHS staff in Portsmouth have worked incredibly hard to shrink down the waiting list while seeing a record surge in patients last year.

Thanks to this Labour government’s Elective Reform Plan, our record investment, and modernisation, 6055 more patients got a faster diagnosis at QA and received quicker treatment or the all-clear over the last 12 months.

This is despite services facing consistently high levels of pressure and experiencing another record year for A&E and ambulances.

It will be a long road ahead, but Labour is fixing our health service in Portsmouth and making it fit for the future and beyond.”