The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Perth Royal Infirmary staff need immediate help, warns union

Royal College of Nursing warns patient care and safety at risk

- Mark Mackay mmackay@thecourier.co.uk

Staff at Perth Royal Infirmary must receive urgent help or patient care and safety will suffer, the Royal College of Nursing has warned.

Nurses at the hospital are said to face a daily battle to retain services in the face of rising demands and a long-term and deepening recruitmen­t crisis.

The RCN said they were under “unpreceden­ted” pressure as they battle to provide safe patient care.

It says an overhaul of how health services are delivered is desperatel­y needed as the hospital merges wards and cuts back on surgical procedures.

Nonetheles­s, it believes urgent recruitmen­t is the only way to continue to ensure the safety of patients – and relieve the increasing burden being placed on existing staff.

NHS Tayside admitted this week it has been forced to introduce “contingenc­y measures” at PRI to cope with its nursing shortage.

Royal College of Nursing senior officer Bob McGlashan said: “The reality is that there is a shortage of nursing staff across Scotland.

“The Scottish Government can point to an increase in the number of nursing and midwifery staff nationally, but the reality in many areas, including at Perth Royal Infirmary, is that while nurses want to do their very best for their patients, rising demands on our health and care services and a shortage of nursing staff mean that the hospital and the staff who work there are under pressure like never before.”

Mr McGlashan said the RCN had been working tirelessly in partnershi­p with staff and NHS Tayside to try to address the specific recruitmen­t issues faced at PRI.

He said: “A change to how services are delivered is needed, but our over-riding concern must always be the safety of patients and that means having enough nursing staff on the wards and out in the community to care for them.”

NHS Tayside is in the midst of a major overhaul of services and the way in which it works as it bids to save millions of pounds.

It hopes that by operating more efficientl­y and using the staff it has more effectivel­y it can maximise the quality of care provided, while lessening the burden on staff.

That may help to address some recruitmen­t issues, but it is also working to make a job with NHS Tayside more attractive.

The reality is that there is a shortage of nursing staff across Scotland. BOB MCGLASHAN

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