The Scotsman

Flagship law broken 100k times

● SNP Treatment Time Guarantee constantly being breached

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE

New figures show the Scottish Government’s flagship waiting time law has been broken 100,000 times since it was introduced.

Research found the Treatment Time Guarantee, which gave patients a legal right to treatment within 12 weeks, has been constantly breached since it was enshrined in law in 2012. Critics said the missed targets were a result of “mismanagem­ent” of the NHS workforce.

The SNP’S flagship waiting time law has been broken more than 100,000 times since it was introduced in 2012, according to new analysis from Scottish Labour.

In 2012 the Scottish Government introduced the Treatment Time Guarantee, which gave patients a legal right to treatment within 12 weeks for conditions such as knee and eye operations.

The guarantee which was establishe­d from The Patient Rights (Scotland) Act 2011, states that eligible patients must start to receive treatment within 84 days of it being agreed.

This target was enshrined in law by then health secretary Nicola Sturgeon in March 2012.

However, figures released by Scottish Labour show that 118,004 people have waited more than 12 weeks for inpatient or day case admission since the Patient Rights Act came into force.

Labour released the analysis ahead of a Holyrood vote today in which the party will seek a commitment that patients are given accurate waiting time estimates form their health board.

The party’s health spokespers­on Anas Sarwar said: “In 2012 the SNP made a promise to the people of Scotland that they would have a legal right to treatment within 12 weeks. That law has now been broken over 100,000 times.

“Patients deserve transparen­cy when it comes to their treatment. Long and unknown waits can have a negative impact on a person’s work, family life, mental and physical wellbeing.

“NHS boards should com- municate an accurate expected waiting time to patients.

“This upfront approach will at least provide transparen­cy and comfort to patients rather keep them in the dark.”

NHS Lothian was the worst offender with 25,288 people waiting over the required time for treatment – almost 10,000 more than NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde which saw 15,841 patients have their legal right breached.

Jacquie Campbell, chief officer of acute services, NHS Lothian, said: “In line with other NHS boards across Scotland we are seeing increasing demands on our services. We treat patients in order of clinical priority and length of wait and tell patients as soon as possible when delays are identified .”

The Tory shadow health secretary, Miles Briggs, said the missed targets were a “direct result of SNP ministers mismanagem­ent of our NHS workforce”.

Scottish Liberal Democrat health spokespers­on Alex Cole-hamilton MSP said: “The First Minister gave a legally binding guarantee that people would receive treatment within 12 weeks but it has hardly been worth the paper it was written on.”

Health secretary Shona Robison said: “Over the last year, we have made an additional £50 million available to NHS boards, to reduce waiting times for all stages of a patient’s journey and particular­ly for inpatients who have been experienci­ng waits above the 12-week treatment time guarantee, and this is helping to reduce waiting times.

“We have also provided £4m funding for new and innovative initiative­s that cut waiting times and improve the way planned care services are managed.

“This year the front-line health budget will increase by over £400m to £13.1 billion.”

 ??  ?? 0 Labour says that records show more than 100,000 patients have had to wait longer than 12 weeks set out in the Patients’ Rights Act
0 Labour says that records show more than 100,000 patients have had to wait longer than 12 weeks set out in the Patients’ Rights Act

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