Catherine DoyleBBC News NI
PA MediaEarlier this year, Prof Mark Taylor, was appointed to help the department drive waiting lists down and said the delays were “nothing short of a national shame”.
The lists were at an all-time high with some specialities recording the highest number of patients and waits across the UK.
In March, the Programme for Government (PfG) set targets for the department, including an aim to treat an extra 70,000 patients by 2027.
On Tuesday, the department said that almost 59,000 additional outpatient, diagnostic and inpatient procedures had been delivered.
Speaking on Radio Ulster’s Good Morning Ulster programme, Nesbitt said: “This is just a start.”
However, he said: “If you want to get the waiting lists to where they should be, it’s going to take five years, with an investment every year of a £135m.”
“Which we don’t have,” he added.
Getty ImagesIn August, BBC News NI reported that some patients who had been red flagged for breast cancer assessments were waiting up to seven weeks to be seen in Northern Ireland.
The target is 14 days.
The minster said hearing about people on long waiting lists is one of the most “distressing” aspects of the job.
PA MediaThe Elective Care Framework plan to tackle waiting lists was published in June 2021, updated in 2024 and in May a funding plan was published.
In the department’s update on Tuesday, it announced that along with the 14% drop in outpatient appointment waiting times, “surgical waits of more than four years are down by 21%”.
“Waits have fallen by almost a quarter in named specialties like gallbladders and tonsils.”
The minister said: “These are early steps, but they show that focus and investment can change lives. The progress we are now seeing is very real.”
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