Ambulance journeys cancelled
Average of 44 trips scrapped daily as demand outstrips resources
Rising demand, staff absences and resource shortages are forcing an average of 44 ambulance journeys to be axed each day in Scotland, new statistics have shown.
The Scottish Ambulance Service has slashed the number of Patient Transport Service journeys it undertakes to combat high demand. The service said cancellation is a “last resort”.
Hundreds of ambulance journeys for patients are cancelled every week as a result of rising demand, staff absence and resource shortages, figures have revealed.
The Scottish Ambulance Service cancels an average of 44 Patient Transport Service (PTS) journeys a day, according to statistics obtained by the Scottish Conservatives.
The PTS uses ambulances to take patients to hospital on a non-emergency basis.
Around 16,000 journeys were cancelled in the year to May, the latest month for which figures are available, down from around 21,000 the previous year – but up on the 2014/15 total of around 10,000.
Of the 16,065 journeys cancelled in the last year, 4,296 were scrapped on the day of the planned journey.
These figures do not include occasions where the journey has been cancelled by the patient.
Responding to the party’s freedom of information request, the ambulance service said there were three reasons for the cancelling of journeys – when “demand exceeds the number of available resources”, unexpected staff absences, and when specialist equipment required such as a stair lift is not available.
The service said cancellation is a “last resort” and 59 ambulance care assistants are currently being recruited and trained to fill vacancies to help cut the number of journeys axed, while shift patterns are being reviewed to ensure best use of resources.
The statement continued: “We have very little control over both the volume and category of PTS transport requests we receive every day.” The service said new systems are being implemented to ensure most effective use of resources.
Conservative health spokesman Miles Briggs said: “The ambulance service is very clear that hundreds of these crucial journeys are being cancelled every week as a result of resources.
“Ambulance workers themselves are doing their best to ensure vulnerable patients can get to hospital on time but demand is far outstripping supply, and this is just another example of the SNP Government failing to plan for the future.” He said the Scottish Government has to work with the ambulance service to improve the cancellation rate.
A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: “We would expect the ambulance service to strive to transport all clinically appropriate patients to their hospital appointments and, where this is not possible, patients should be signposted to alternative transport providers to ensure they can make their appointment.”
“Ambulance workers themselves are doing their best to ensure vulnerable patients can get to hospital on time but demand is far outstripping supply”
MILES BRIGGS
Getting an ambulance from home to hospital for treatment is a vital service for a good number of patients, especially the elderly and vulnerable.
But now we learn that around 44 trips are cancelled weekly across Scotland, leading to missed appointments and inconvenience.
This can only be seen as evidence of a health service showing further signs of severe strain.
The Scottish Ambulance Service cite high demand, staff shortages and specialist equipment being unavailable for certain journeys.
However, ambulance chiefs also say more patients need driven to other health boards, which ties up much-needed staff and vehicles.
Each delay and cancellation has a knock-on effect, leading to inefficiencies elsewhere in the National Health Service.
With patients going to overstretched accident and emergency departments to their condition worsening and needing more complex treatment, no one expects to be treated this way.
If we don’t act now, things are likely to get worse.