The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Time to review how health boards are run, says First Minister

Nicola Sturgeon issues her first comments to MSPs since the charity cash scandal at NHS Tayside blew up

- GareTh mcpherson poliTical ediTor gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

Nicola Sturgeon says it is time to look at how health boards are run in the wake of the financial storm at NHS Tayside.

In her first comments to MSPs since the charity cash scandal blew up, the first minister insisted her government reacted decisively by installing new leadership at the health board.

The SNP leader backed moves towards “regionalis­ation”, which would see Tayside working more closely with neighbouri­ng boards such as NHS Grampian.

But she distanced herself from a call by former health secretary Alex Neil, the SNP MSP, to reduce the number of territoria­l health boards in Scotland from 14 to three.

Appearing before a committee of senior MSPs, Ms Sturgeon said the Scottish Government handled the Tayside issue “extremely seriously with the actions that were taken to renew and change the leadership”.

She said the Tayside situation and the regionalis­ation of some services, meant “this is an appropriat­e time to look at governance for good, positive reasons”.

“I think we need to allow regionalis­ation to evolve in the way that it is,” she added.

“I’m not – because I think it distracts a lot of people in the health service – of the view that we should go for hard-wired structural changes to embed that in a firmer way.

“This means that the health board continues to be the building block, so that link of that accountabi­lity that we have just now, continues to be I think the appropriat­e one.

“But of course, as these issues develop that’s something we will...continue to consider.”

It emerged this month that health chiefs in Dundee dipped into a donations fund to cover general expenditur­e.

In March, it was revealed that digital healthcare cash was re-used to mask the true extent of the board’s financial woes.

An investigat­ion by the charities regulator OSCR is under way, which is looking at the behaviour of the Tayside board over its use of £2.7 million of endowment fund cash, as well as probing whether other health boards are implicated.

The total sum of bail-out loans from the Scottish Government to the board is expected to exceed £45m this year.

Caroline Gardner, the Auditor General, is updating a Holyrood committee on Tayside’s financial position today.

I’m not – because I think it distracts a lot of people in the health service – of the view that we should go for hard-wired structural changes. NICOLA STURGEON

 ?? Picture: Andrew Cowan. ?? First Minister Nicola Sturgeon appears before the Scottish Parliament Committee Convener’s Group to answer their questions.
Picture: Andrew Cowan. First Minister Nicola Sturgeon appears before the Scottish Parliament Committee Convener’s Group to answer their questions.

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