The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Queuing at 7am to see a doctor

Lines of patients forming outside surgeries across Fife

- Gareth mcpherson political editor

A GP shortage is forcing patients to queue in the early hours outside Fife surgeries.

Lines of people start forming from 7am as people eschew the traditiona­l phone appointmen­t lottery to grab a scarce meeting in person.

In Fife, at least 14 surgeries have encountere­d serious difficulti­es over the summer in recruiting GPs, leading to 19 practices in the kingdom having full patient lists.

Dr Seonaid McCallum, of Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p, said there is a GP shortage in the region.

Dr Miles Mack, of the Royal College of General Practition­ers in Scotland, said: “GPs have been calling for positive action to end this crisis since 2013.”

Shadow Scottish secretary Lesley Laird said it is “fundamenta­lly wrong” people in her Kirkcaldy constituen­cy and beyond are being forced to camp out before sunrise.

Sick people are resorting to waiting outside GP surgeries in the early hours to get an appointmen­t, The Courier can reveal.

In a stark symptom of GP shortages, Tayside and Fife patients have been spotted queuing up from 7am to see a family doctor.

A senior Dundee GP confirmed the phenomenon is widespread because of a “mismatch” between patient demand and doctor numbers.

Shadow Scottish secretary Lesley Laird said it is “fundamenta­lly wrong” people in her Kirkcaldy constituen­cy and beyond are being forced to camp out before sunrise.

“People are physically standing, queuing outside GP surgeries at 7am to get appointmen­ts in Fife,” she said.

“When I talk to other MPs in constituen­cies across the country they say that’s the same.”

Queues have been seen outside the Broughty Ferry Health Centre in Brown Street and the Leven Health Centre in Victoria Road.

Dr Andrew Cowie, a Dundee GP and the vice-chairman of the local medical committee, said queuing for appointmen­ts is common in Tayside.

“There is undoubtedl­y a mismatch between patient demand and GP numbers,” he said.

“The queues are, unfortunat­ely, for appointmen­ts – though there are issues with registrati­ons.”

He said Tayside has suffered “severe difficulti­es in GP recruitmen­t and retention”, in line with the rest of the country.

Dr Cowie said people come to his practice in Hawkhill before opening hours, although they are let in to shelter from the elements.

He added there is a “glimmer of hope” in that a new contract should encourage young doctors to become GPs.

In Fife, at least 14 surgeries have encountere­d serious difficulti­es over the summer in recruiting GPs, leading to 19 practices in the kingdom having full patient lists.

Dr Seonaid McCallum, from Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p, said there is a GP shortage in Fife.

“Despite this national shortage, Fife remains proactive in efforts to reduce vacancy numbers and is taking forward a range of initiative­s,” he added.

A spokeswoma­n for Broughty Ferry Health Centre, where queues are regularly seen, said it is down to patients whether they choose to queue for an appointmen­t or phone the practice.

She said: “It is the patient’s choice. We have sufficient appointmen­ts that are available by pre-booking or on the day so patients can choose to phone or queue in the morning.”

 ?? Pictures: Mhairi Edwards/George McLuskie. ?? People waiting outside Broughty Ferry Health Centre before it opens.
Pictures: Mhairi Edwards/George McLuskie. People waiting outside Broughty Ferry Health Centre before it opens.
 ??  ?? Patients queue outside Scoonie Medical Practice in Leven.
Patients queue outside Scoonie Medical Practice in Leven.

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