NHS "pushed to the brink" warn BMA Scotland

Published 26th Jun 2018

The NHS in Scotland is being stretched to the very edge'' doctors leaders will warn as a new survey revealed just 3% of them believe the service is adequately resourced.

Just 6% of doctors questioned believe there are enough staff working in the NHS to provide quality patient care - with 89% disagreeing with this.

Meanwhile two thirds of doctors (66%) said ā€œinadequateā€ resources were now significantly'' impacting on the quality and safety of patient care.

A further three out of 10 (31%) felt the lack of resources was ā€œslightlyā€ affecting the service, while only 3% described resources as being ā€œadequateā€.

Dr Peter Bennie, chair of the British Medical Association (BMA) in Scotland will use a speech to warn that the survey shows the ā€œstark reality of a profession pushed to the brinkā€.

He will add: ā€œWhile doctors are delivering high quality care wherever and however they possibly can, we are stretched to the limit of what we are capable of.

ā€œPerhaps we have not quite reached the dire working conditions and morale seen in England, but we are clinging by our fingertips from sliding down a similar path.ā€

His speech comes as the NHS across the UK prepares to celebrate the 70th anniversary of its formation - with Mr Bennie to insist ministers at Holyrood must act to ā€œensure we have an NHS in Scotland that we can celebrate for many birthdays to comeā€.

Almost 1,000 doctors in Scotland took part in the research, with seven out of 10 (71%) of the opinion the health service in Scotland had become worse over the last year.

Meanwhile 88% of doctors believe that without a ā€œsignificantā€ increase in funding, the NHS will no longer be able to provide comprehensive care within a decade.

Mr Bennie, delivering his final speech to the BMA annual representative meeting in Brighton before stepping down in the autumn, he will stress the NHS in Scotland must aim higher than the ā€œvery low barā€ of providing a better service than in England.

The demands and pressures on doctors have been ā€œincreasing substantially year on yearā€, he will say, while pay has been ā€œhit in real termsā€ and vacancies become harder to fill.

Dr Bennie will add: ā€œIt is just not sustainable, for our NHS or for our profession.

ā€œWe know from the survey that two thirds of Scottish doctors who responded think resources are inadequate and this is significantly affecting the quality and safety of care, while 71% feel that overall NHS services have worsened in the last year.

ā€œNine out of ten Scottish doctors say staffing is simply not adequate to provide quality patient care. This is simply not good enough, either for patients or doctors.

ā€œWe all want to provide the very best care we can, but we are being prevented from doing so by an under resourced and under staffed system. It illustrates the urgent need for action at all levels of Government.ā€

While the UK Govenrment has promised a Ā£20.5 billion-a-year boost to the NHS budget in England and Wales, Mr Bennie will argue the amount of cash that would come to Scotland as a result of this would be ā€œinsufficient to move NHS Scotland to a fully sustainable footing for the longer termā€.

He will say: ā€œInvestment on a greater scale is still going to be required in the years ahead, along with concerted action to tackle the issues with recruitment and retention.ā€

The BMA Scotland chair will also call for pay and conditions to be improved, while urging the Scottish Government to ā€œend the obsession with a narrow range of targets that tell us little about outcomes for patients, and lead to a culture of blame and political pressureā€.

While he will accept there will always be a need for data on the NHS, Mr Bennie will claim ā€œthe political and media narrative is often driven by waiting times that say very little about standards of care or what is best for the patientā€.

Conservative health spokesman Miles Briggs said: ā€œIt's no surprise to see doctors speak out over the state of Scotland's NHS.

ā€œThey've put up with more than a decade of SNP mismanagement, and worked exceptionally hard to keep problems at bay.ā€

Scottish Liberal Democrat health spokesman Alex Cole-Hamilton MSP said: ā€œNHS staff are fed up with government inaction. Struggling services such as GPs and mental health clearly need a cash injection, fresh ideas and for Nicola Sturgeon to change her health team.ā€

Scottish Labour's health spokesman Anas Sarwar said: ā€œScottish Labour has already launched an NHS workforce commission to find solutions to the SNP's workforce crisis in our health service - and we would end SNP and Tory austerity and invest in our health service so our doctors and nurses get the support they need.ā€

Scottish Greens health spokewoman Alison Johnstone said: ā€œPeter Bennie is right that Scotland must aim higher than comparing our NHS with that south of the border - we should be comparing with where we want to be."