The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
£1 billion estimated to foot repair bill at crumbling hospitals.
Shock figures reveal huge cash sum required to repair our crumbling Tayside hospitals
Health chiefs have admitted they need more than £1 billion in funding to fix crumbling Scottish hospitals.
The shock figures show that facilities in Tayside, Grampian and the Highlands and Islands account for two-thirds of NHS Scotland’s “high risk” repair backlog.
Bosses at the health boards have suggested that the most pressing problems are at the area’s three largest hospitals – Ninewells in Dundee, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary and Raigmore in Inverness.
Just tackling the “high and significant” issues at the three hospitals would cost £351 million, while the total bill to fix all the maintenance problems at properties run by the north health boards would be £1bn.
The figures are higher than previous estimates which suggested the repair bill for all health facilities in Scotland would be about £1bn, not just those in the north region.
That is because the calculations are based on more “realistic” project costs, which include VAT, professional fees and enabling work.
The scale of the backlog has been branded “daunting” by opposition politicians who warned of a looming “emergency”.
Trade union leaders said that medical staff must be able to do their jobs without “their work being compromised by poorly maintained wards and buildings”.
The figures have emerged just days ahead of the Scottish budget on Thursday, and follow a major row about the state of Scottish police stations last month.
The NHS in Scotland is divided into three regions, with the “north” area covering six health boards – Grampian, Highland, Orkney, Shetland, Tayside and the Western Isles.
It covers 26% of the nation’s population and 69% of its land mass, and has 76 hospitals, 239 health centres, 154 independent GP facilities, dental practices, ophthalmologist practices and 306 community pharmacists.
A new, decade-long “regional asset plan” has been produced by the health boards amid concern that 60% of the area’s NHS properties are more than 30 years old.
The report states that the “main risks” identified were at Ninewells,
Foresterhill in Aberdeen and Raigmore.
It said the unit cost of the backlog maintenance at the three hospital sites was £200m, of which £117m was considered “significant and high risk”.
But a more realistic estimate for the “project costs” would be three times higher, to take account of VAT, professional fees and enabling costs.
The report said that the project costs for “high and significant backlog removal for the three main hospitals would be circa £351m”.
The asset strategy said: “The north accounts for 66% of the high risk backlog in Scotland.
“Clearly this level of risk in the three main acute hospitals requires to be addressed.”
Other significant backlog issues were identified, including a further £34m requirement at Foresterhill in Aberdeen, a need for £6m of work at Perth Royal Infirmary, £12m at Stracathro Hospital, and £7.5m at Argyll and Bute Hospital.
The report said the total outstanding maintenance bill for the region was £344m at unit cost, but the “funding required to deal with the backlog in the north region would be around £1bn plus statutory compliance aspects”.
It added: “If we are to continue to provide a safe and efficient clinical environment for patients, staff and visitors to enjoy in the 21st Century, investment in our essential estate has to be prioritised, along with disinvestment on non-essential assets.
“The investment required, however, will be very challenging within the existing funding envelope.”
More than £118m was invested in projects in the north region last year, but Audit Scotland said recently that capital funding of NHS boards had decreased by 63% over the last decade.
Health boards in the north region, meanwhile, are expecting to have to make £450m of efficiency savings over the next five years, despite rising demand for services.
Dr Lewis Morrison, chairman of doctors’ union BMA Scotland, said: “This report emphasises that the under-resourcing of the NHS isn’t just about staff and the capacity to treat all our patients in a timely way, but that it extends to the very bricks and mortar where healthcare is delivered.
“It’s not just about high profile new builds in the central belt of Scotland, but also often ageing NHS buildings all over Scotland that are long overdue for repair or upgrading to allow us to look after patients in effective, clean modern and safe facilities.”
Bob McGlashan, senior officer for the RCN Scotland nursing union, said: “It is very difficult to control threats to patient safety, such as hospital acquired infection, if the wards and buildings where patients are being looked after are in a state of disrepair.
“Nurses and other healthcare staff must be able to do their jobs without their work being compromised by poorly maintained wards and buildings.
“Patient safety is paramount and, even though health boards are under pressure to balance their books, they need to make sure it is not undermined by this backlog.”
He added: “While there is merit in taking a regional approach when looking at this issue, the north region health boards need to address the risks for patients and staff within each of their areas.
“Staff must be able to do their jobs without their work being compromised by poorly maintained wards and buildings.”
According to the report, NHS Grampian has the highest “unit cost” repair backlog of the north boards, at £154m, followed by Tayside at £111m and Highland at £61m.
Aberdeen Royal Infirmary accounted for £75m, while £79m was related to Ninewells Hospital and £45m was at Raigmore Hospital.
Tayside had the biggest bill relating to “high” and “significant” risk issues, at £81m, followed by Grampian, which had £32m in those categories, and Highland, which had £15m.
Alexander Burnett, Scottish Conservative MSP for Aberdeenshire West, said: “This report lays bare the
daunting backlog of repairs faced by our local health boards.
“Without proper funding for the Scottish NHS, hard-working staff could be trapped in deteriorating premises for years to come.
“Rather than address this as an emergency, Nicola Sturgeon wastes time debating flags.”
Mike Rumbles, Liberal Democrat MSP for the north-east region, said: “Across the north of Scotland our hospitals are facing a vast repair bill.
“With more than half of health boards now in special measures, it’s clear that our health service is really struggling.
“It must be clear to ministers that Scottish health boards do not have the funds they need for capital investment and maintenance.”
A spokeswoman for the NHS boards in the north region said: “The north of Scotland estate comprises a wide range of buildings and land on more than 400 operational sites across the north with a total floor area of 1.2 million sq m.”
She added: “61% of the north’s premises are over 30 years old and there is significant investment planned over the next three years to improve this.
“Modern healthcare facilities are complex and regulatory standards are continually evolving and becoming more rigorous. Over £118m was invested in assets and infrastructure in the north last year to meet those standards and improve the healthcare environment.
“Within the north annual spend on backlog maintenance is directed to the most significant and high risk issues.
“The north regions are continually reviewing their priorities for each financial year around backlog maintenance investment and have significant plans in place to address those priorities, ensuring the facilities are kept both operational and safe for staff and patients,” she added.
A Scottish Government spokesman said: “The Scottish Government is investing extensively in NHS infrastructure in the north of Scotland including in the £64m Balfour Hospital in Orkney, which opened in 2019, and providing over £200m to the Baird Family Hospital and Anchor Cancer Centre in Aberdeen, which is expected to start construction later this year.
“We welcome the production of the north of Scotland’s regional asset management plan as it demonstrates that local boards are working collaboratively across the region to deliver the appropriate level of local, regional and national clinical services.
“All NHS boards are expected to manage their estate and any associated backlog maintenance on a risk management basis, that ensures the safe delivery of clinical services.”
Across the north of Scotland our hospitals are facing a vast repair bill. MIKE RUMBLES MSP
When the Queen Mother declared Ninewells Hospital open for business 45 years ago it was a step change moment for healthcare on Tayside. But like every major medical facility, Ninewells has had a hard life since.
It has offered treatment to millions of patients, welcomed millions more visitors and provided accommodation for tens of thousands of health workers.
With such volumes of human traffic through its doors and with advancements in technology necessitating constant change to the physical and technical hospital environment, wear and tear is inevitable.
NHS Tayside and other regional health boards spend very considerable sums of money on maintenance each year to ensure the hospital estate is in the best possible order.
Those efforts are commendable but, with an estimated £1 billion repair bill for hospital sites in the north of Scotland alone, local health authorities can do little more than put a sticking plaster on what is an open wound.
Scotland’s NHS boards already operate in constrained financial circumstances and cannot feasibly be expected to clear up this issue by themselves.
The answer lies in a long-term strategic healthcare investment programme funded centrally by the taxpayer.
Creating a modern NHS estate for the people of Scotland won’t come quickly or cheaply.
But, ultimately, it will be a worthwhile investment.