Patients with a skin lesion suspected to be melanoma had to wait an average of 114 days from their first appointment to treatment, according to an audit carried out at Waikato Hospital.
The study, carried out by staff members at the hospital and published in today's New Zealand Medical Journal, was to determine whether the hospital could comply with aspirational cancer treatment targets suggested by the National Melanoma Standards working group in 2008.
The study found the hospital's compliance was low for all of the tough standards for timely treatment of melanoma patients although it surpassed the Government's Faster Cancer Treatment target by 1 per cent in August.
The Faster Cancer Treatment target currently requires health boards to ensure that 85 per cent of patients received their first treatment within 62 days of being found to have a high suspicion of cancer.
When looking at melanoma patients alone, none of the people treated in the Waikato in the year ending February 16, 2016, was treated within the 62 days, the study found. The average time from first suspicion of cancer to treatment was 114 days with a range of 63 to 320 days.