The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)
Out-of-hours services on brink of ‘disaster’ before intervention
Doctor defends centralising services in Kirkcaldy
Overnight GP services in Fife would have been facing disaster if urgent contingency measures had not been implemented, a doctor has claimed.
Dunfermline GP Dr Alan McGovern said the service was becoming more and more fragile as fewer family doctors opted to work out of hours.
Of the 150 GPs signed up to the region’s primary care emergency service, only 68 were performing regular sessions at the end of March.
Dr McGovern, Fife Health and Social Care Partnership’s (HSCP) clinical director for the west area, revealed the service had been facing a month where the majority of overnight shifts across the region could not be covered.
“There was a risk of an even worse disaster of having no doctors on at all overnight,” he said.
“At that point we were advised we should go to contingency.”
Dr McGovern defended the decision to close overnight GP services in St Andrews, Glenrothes and Dunfermline for three months and centralise them at Victoria Hospital, Kirkcaldy.
“It’s because we don’t have enough doctors, urgent care practitioners or specialist nurses to ensure a safe service,” he said.
He said Kirkcaldy had been chosen due to its proximity to two areas of social and economic deprivation – Cardenden/ Lochgelly and Methil/Buckhaven.
Dr McGovern addressed the public at a meeting in Dunfermline on Monday night where many people expressed anger and concern over the loss of the out-of-hours service between midnight and 8am. As we reported yesterday, similar concerns were expressed at a separate meeting in St Andrews and a third debate will take place at the CISWO, South Street, Glenrothes, at 6.30pm today.
The contingency measure was brought in at short notice and will be reviewed in July, although there is no guarantee the four centres will be reinstated at that time.
A wider review of the long-term future of community services will be taken to public consultation from next month.
HSCP chief executive Michael Kellet said members of the Integrated Joint Board would be asked to agree a proposal next Tuesday.
“We don’t have enough doctors, urgent care practitioners or specialist nurses to ensure a safe service.
DR ALAN MCGOVERN