Hundreds of patients were waiting for routine treatment at Cornwall Partnership Trust in October, figures show.

The Nuffield Trust think tank said progress on getting through the planned treatment backlog has "stalled yet again", as the NHS comes under severe strain.

NHS England figures show 685 patients were waiting for non-urgent elective operations or treatment at Cornwall Partnership NHS Foundation Trust at the end of October – up from 539 in September, but a decrease on 768 in October 2024.

None of those had been waiting for longer than a year.

The median waiting time from referral at an NHS Trust to treatment at Cornwall Partnership Trust was five weeks at the end of October – down from six weeks in September.

Nationally, an estimated 7.4 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of October, relating to 6.2 million patients. It was up slightly from the number of treatments at the end of September.

Just over 2% of people on the list for hospital treatment had been waiting more than 52 weeks in October.

The Government and NHS England are aiming to bring this figure to under 1% by March 2026.

It comes as the NHS is grappling with the threat of resident doctors going on strike next week in a dispute with the Government over pay and jobs.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting has offered the British Medical Association a last-minute deal in the hope of avoiding a five-day strike, which starts next Wednesday.

The doctors' union has agreed to put the offer to members over the coming days. The offer includes a fast expansion of specialist training posts as well as covering out-of-pocket expenses such as exam fees, but does not include extra pay.

Mr Streeting said: "I urge resident doctors not to inflict further damage on the NHS, vote for this deal, and call off the Christmas strikes."

Separate figures show 1.8 million patients in England were waiting for a key diagnostic test in October – a rise on 1.7 million in September.

At Cornwall Partnership Trust, 74 patients were waiting for urodynamics tests.

Of them, 58 (78%) had been waiting for at least six weeks.

Sarah Scobie, Nuffield Trust deputy director of research, said hospitals are facing "extraordinarily" high rate of hospital admissions for flu.

"In the latest monthly data, progress on getting through the planned treatment backlog has stalled yet again – this reflects an NHS under severe strain and struggling to recover to the standards that the public expect.

"Our analysis of the Autumn Budget shows that growth in NHS spending is comparable to the slow growth seen during 2010s austerity.

"Such tight constraints will make it very difficult for the NHS to do everything asked of it, especially in the face of mounting problems like staff strikes and flu."