The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Staff shortages force children’s wards to close

nhs: Scottish Government urged to fund extra trainee doctors to address ‘gaps’ in rotas

- laura pa Terson

Staff shortages forced closures at a quarter of children’s wards and more than 40% of baby units at Scottish hospitals, new research has found.

A total of 25% of paediatric inpatient units and 41.7% of neonatal units had to temporaril­y close to new admissions due to a shortage of medical staff, the Royal College of Paediatric­s and Child Health (RCPCH) discovered.

The latest figures, for the year to October 2015, show Scotland’s level of children’s ward closures is lower than the UK rate of 31.3% but the neonatal closures are marginally higher than the UK rate of 41.1%

The college is calling for the Scottish Government to fund extra trainee doctors to address “gaps” in rotas and help prevent closures.

There are currently 310 paediatric consultant­s in Scotland and the college wants this to be increased by 84-110 posts if its workforce standards are to be met.

Entry level trainee positions have been full in the past three years but the college’s report found “significan­t gaps” in junior and mid-level paediatric trainee rotas.

The analysis shows 4.4% of paediatric doctors in Scotland qualified to practice medicine in the EEA outside the UK and 19.1% qualified in the rest of the world.

In addition to increasing trainee doctors, the report’s recommenda­tions also call on the UK Government to guarantee the migrant status of EU nationals in the NHS and ensure paediatric­s remains on the Scottish shortage occupation list.

The report states: “Workforce planning in Scotland must take into account the changing demographi­cs and working patterns of paediatric­ians by recruiting the right number of trainees to allow for less than full-time working, parental leave and experience in research, education, leadership or overseas medicine.”

Provision of acute care in Scotland is “rarely affected by hospital closures”, it continues.

Professor Steve Turner, the RCPCH officer for Scotland, said: “Time and again we see rota gaps in paediatric services causing significan­t strain on the system and these figures show that staffing shortages are leading to service closures all too often. This can only be resolved by increasing the numbers coming into paediatric­s.

“The number of consultant­s is increasing in Scotland and from 2013 to 2015 we saw the paediatric consultant workforce grow by more than 13%. The target for consultant­s in Scotland though is for a further 27-35% so there’s obviously still a long way to go.”

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