Hundreds of Herts and Essex kids waiting more than a year to see community paediatrician

New data has come as a 'shock' to councillors

Author: Deborah Price, LDRSPublished 24th Jul 2023

HUNDREDS of children have been waiting in excess of 18 months to see a community paediatrician in east and north Hertfordshire.

Children are referred to community paediatrics if they are suspected of having conditions and disorders that include Autism, dyspraxia, ADHD and epilepsy, as well as developmental disorders and neurodisability.

On Wednesday (July 19) county councillors were told that 970 children had been waiting in excess of 65 weeks in east and north Hertfordshire.

And they were told that 497 children had been waiting more than 78 weeks, which is equivalent to 18 months.

Members of the county council’s Health Scrutiny Committee were presented with the data on Wednesday (July 19), in response to a question from Jan Taylor, from Healthwatch Hertfordshire.

Matt Webb, from the Hertfordshire and West Essex Integrated Care Board (HWEICB), told the committee that community paediatrics was “problematic”.

He said a ‘recovery plan’ was being developed in east and north Herts, that was more comprehensive than reducing the backlog – making ‘a more lasting and sustainable change’.

And, he said, it would include a single integrated model for ADHD and explore some out-sourcing of assessments.

“It is a problem for us,” he said. “I think it is a problem nationally, with the increasing demand for these types of services.

“It is mainly being caused by insufficient staff and clinical capacity to meet the referral demand.

“The referrals have been steadily increasing over the last five years, but the clinical capacity to see those referrals has been static.

“I know east and north Herts has tried to recruit some additional community paediatricians on several occasions – but has had limited success. Hence why we are exploring the wider routes.

“So yes, I recognise it is a problem that we are absolutely focussed on. And we are working with the Trust on a recovery plan and regularly monitoring the situation.”

Meanwhile HWEICB director of strategy Beverley Flowers also highlighted the change in focus of community paediatrics – with a rapid growth in young people being referred for ASD assessments.

But pointing to length of time it took to train, she said that availability of staff did not reflect training now – but a lack of training from five or six years ago.

She said they were now looking at the wider use of practitioners. But she stressed: “There isn’t a quick fix and it is a national issue.”

Officers from the Hertfordshire and West Essex Integrated Care Board were presenting to the Health Scrutiny Committee, as part of the committee’s annual patient experience scrutiny.

And the committee asked for more information to follow about how community paediatric waiting lists were being sustainably reduced and how there are measures on place for future to make sure not increasing.

Following the meeting, Liberal Democrat Cllr Chris White – who had led the questioning of HWEICB officers – said the number of children waiting was “a bit shocking”.

And he said there was a need for action to bring these numbers down.

“Sometimes in the NHS you wonder how it has got to this stage,” he told the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

“This is too many children – and too long in a child’s life. There needs to be action to bring this down – it needs to be given priority.”

And a spokesperson for the HWEICB said: “We are working closely with all our providers of children’s services to support them in reducing these numbers.

“This is a priority for us so that children in Hertfordshire and west Essex can get the treatment they need.”

According to the HWEICB 1752 children have been waiting in excess of a year to see a community paediatrician at East and North Herts. And the total number of children on the waiting list is 4493.

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