The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

NHS: Health service series starts.

Transforma­tion programme will reshape every part of NHS Tayside

- Mark MacKay mmackay@thecourier.co.uk

NHS Tayside is about to embark on a radical five-year transforma­tion of its health services that will change how patients receive care.

The ambitious programme of modernisat­ion will see the service redesigned and reformed to improve the health and wellbeing of people and communitie­s.

The changes are being made amidst unpreceden­ted budgetary pressures, with the NHS seriously financiall­y challenged across the country.

Over the past three years, NHS Tayside has been spending more than the budget it receives and has required Scottish Government bailouts to achieve financial balance.

That will mean a crackdown on waste, from cutting out unnecessar­y prescribin­g of medication and unnecessar­y medical procedures to disposing of buildings that are no longer fit for purpose.

It will also mean a shift to more effective means of giving care, with an increasing awareness amongst the medical profession that traditiona­l means of providing care may no longer be the best solution.

Hospitalis­ation and a network of local community hospitals are still what many people expect of their health service, but the modernisat­ion programme will signal a shift to providing more services in the community or home and a shift to regional and national specialist centres.

Dundee has already been chosen as one of four national trauma centres and that model will continue for further specialiti­es in collaborat­ion with other Scottish NHS trusts.

Perhaps most importantl­y, the NHS is faced with responding to Scotland’s changing demographi­cs – in particular an ageing population – and that is one of the prime motives for transformi­ng health services in Tayside.

People are living longer and as a result more patients are living with multiple, long-term medical conditions, such diabetes and heart disease.

That means increased investment in care for older people – particular­ly in areas such as Highland Perthshire, Broughty Ferry and Monifieth where the percentage of elderly residents outstrips other parts of Scotland.

In addition, the NHS will look to rise to the challenge of providing a suitably-trained workforce over the next five to 10 years.

Introducin­g innovation and new techniques, reducing spending on agency staff and addressing skills shortages in areas such as mental health will be key.

Overall, the NHS hopes that the changes will result in a fit and lean health service capable of providing the highest quality service to 21st century patients.

 ??  ?? NHS Tayside is looking to transform services across the region including at, clockwise from top, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, Murray Royal Hospital in Perth, Pitlochry Community Hospital and Perth Royal Infirmary.
NHS Tayside is looking to transform services across the region including at, clockwise from top, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, Murray Royal Hospital in Perth, Pitlochry Community Hospital and Perth Royal Infirmary.
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