The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Scotland faces GPs recruitmen­t crisis warns senior BMA official.

New BMA Scotland GP chairman says it could take five years to finally solve longrunnin­g problems

- GARETH MCPHERSON POLITICAL EDITOR gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

The GP crisis has been “like a car crash in slow motion” but could still take more than five years to resolve, says a leading doctor.

Dr Andrew Buist, new chairman of the British Medical Associatio­n’s GP committee in Scotland, has warned of more emergency takeovers of Tayside and Fife health centres.

The Blairgowri­e partner said government­s have been too slow to react amid years of underfundi­ng, though the new GP contract and extra cash promised for primary care offer hope.

Maryfield is the latest practice to be taken over by NHS Tayside because of a lack of GPs, following in the footsteps of Lochee and Brechin.

Lochgelly was left with one full-time GP covering 3,600 patients this summer, as staff across Fife told an MSP the recruitmen­t crisis had already spread to nurses and other trained surgery staff.

Dr Buist, a senior partner at Ardblair Medical Practice, said the problems in general practice have “not happened overnight”.

“This has been coming like a car crash in slow motion,” he told The Courier.

“This has been coming for probably 10 years and because it’s a multi-factorial problem it needs multi-factorial solutions. And because it’s taken a long time to develop, the turning around we will be measuring in years.”

Asked if there will be more surgeries going under, Dr Buist said: “I think it’s likely there will be more practices giving up their contract, certainly in Scotland and possibly in Tayside, in the next few months.

“Despite the fact we know there is a crisis we have been unable so far to turn the corner.

“The new contract is six months old, it’s going to take some time to get purchase because we need to get these services in place and that depends on a new workforce, which as you know is not queueing up at the labour exchange to take these jobs.”

Dr Buist, who said there were warning signs of the GP crisis as early as 2006, hopes to see significan­t improvemen­ts by 2021.

“But I don’t think it’s going to be all sorted at the end of that three-year period,” he added.

“I can see it taking longer than five years because it takes 10 years to train a GP, to take a medical student and put them through the whole process, so that’s the timescale.”

Alex Rowley, the Labour MSP in Fife, said health centre workers across the kingdom are telling him that vacancies are “no longer just about GPs in medical practices, it is the specialist nurses and all the trained staff”.

Bill Bowman, for the Scottish Conservati­ves, said: “This car crash, as Dr Buist calls it, is down to the SNP’s failures to recruit staff and support primary care.”

Dr Buist also called for the dilapidate­d Brechin Health Centre to be replaced, which would attract more staff.

The former team doctor at St Johnstone FC said the building was not fit for purpose at the turn of the century and recalled seeing buckets collecting water leaks shortly after the health board took over in 2015.

“The physical aspect of the premises is seriously in need of replacemen­t. I think the people of Brechin deserve better,” Dr Buist said.

We asked the Scottish Government on Monday if it agrees with Dr Buist that it will be years before the recruitmen­t crisis can be resolved; how will workforce shortages be addressed and why there has been a delay in taking action. It failed to respond.

 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? A queue of people waiting outside Broughty Ferry Health Centre for an appointmen­t.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. A queue of people waiting outside Broughty Ferry Health Centre for an appointmen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom