The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

NHS Tayside attacked over £4m in ‘bonuses’

BMA spokesman says awards are crucial in attracting consultant­s to Scotland

- JAKE KEITH jkeith@thecourier.co.uk

Cash-strapped NHS Tayside has forked out more than £4 million in awards to consultant­s and academics in the last year.

The public health board, which was required to release the data under Freedom of Informatio­n laws, paid out £4,369,958 to around 280 academics and consultant­s in the most recent financial year up to January 31 2017.

The bonuses are on top of annual salaries of up to £102,000 for consultant­s, and are split into two types.

Distinctio­n/merit awards totalled £1,250,864, while discretion­ary points awards came in at £3,119,094.

Liam Kerr, Scottish Conservati­ve MSP for the North East region, said that it set the “wrong tone” during a period of serious financial difficulti­es for the health board.

“No matter how these payments are dressed up, they are bonuses awarded at a health board that has faced serious financial difficulti­es and has required several government bail-outs,” he said.

“At a time when the bulk of the NHS Tayside workforce have faced constraint­s on pay levels, this sets the wrong tone and will do nothing for staff morale.”

The budget for distinctio­n awards was frozen by the Scottish Government in 2010, however, new cash awards, paid through discretion­ary points, continue to be awarded as part of national terms and conditions for consultant­s.

A total of £147,384 was also handed out to retired consultant­s and academics in the same time period.

The number of retired staff members who received the cash is unknown as the NHS said this could lead to the identifica­tion of individual­s.

However, a British Medical Associatio­n (BMA) Scotland spokesman said the awards are crucial in attracting consultant­s to work in Scotland.

“These awards are a long-standing part of the defined pay structure for consultant­s and are intended to recognise those who contribute most towards the delivery of safe, high-quality care to patients and to the continuous improvemen­t of NHS services,” he said.

“Unlike in the rest of the UK, distinctio­n awards have been frozen in value in Scotland since 2010 and are not being awarded to anyone who is not an existing award holder.

“This makes it significan­tly more difficult to attract consultant­s to work in Scotland and just last week the latest figures showed almost 7% of consultant posts in Scotland were unfilled, with nearly half of these empty for more than six months.”

A spokesman for NHS Tayside added: “Discretion­ary points are awarded locally through a nationally agreed process applied by every health board.

“These points are intended to recognise the additional contributi­on of medical staff in areas of patient care and are awarded through joint considerat­ion of applicatio­ns undertaken in partnershi­p with our local BMA Local Negotiatin­g Committee.”

 ??  ?? Liam Kerr, Scottish Conservati­ve MSP for the North East, accused the health board of setting the wrong tone.
Liam Kerr, Scottish Conservati­ve MSP for the North East, accused the health board of setting the wrong tone.

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