The Scotsman

Report calls for overhaul of Scottish NHS

- By SCOTT MACNAB scottmacna­b@scotsman.com

A radical overhaul of health services in Scotland is needed with the traditiona­l 9-5, fivedays-a-week approach "consigned to history", MSPS have found.

A new 21st-century system that embraces technology and is shaped around the needs of patients is called for in a report by Holyrood's health committee.

This should include a shift away from GPS being the "deliverer of all services" and a greater role for other profession­als like nurses, occupation­al therapists and physiother­apists, as well as dieticians and language therapists.

There must also be greater emphasis on prevention with Scots taking a greater role in their own care, the report says.

The health and social care budget in Scotland in topped £15 billion this year, exceeding 50 per cent of the entire Scottish budget for the first time. But demands are expected to grow as the population ages.

Committee convener Lewis Macdonald said: “It is clear that when it comes to primary care, the status quo is no longer an option. Existing ways of delivering care are not only financiall­y unsustaina­ble, but have failed to keep pace with modern life.

“We need to radically rethink primary care so that we can ensure our citizens receive the best possible care for generation­s to come.

“We must move away from the automatic provision of prescripti­ons and towards social prescribin­g. There must be widespread adoption of a preventati­ve model of delivering care and the health service must fully embrace new technology."

The committee’s report is entitled What should Primary Care look like for the next generation? It is the culminatio­n of a two-year inquiry into the future of primary care.

Health services have not kept pace with "modern living”, it finds, and must fully embrace technology.

"Primary care requires radical revision to ensure our citizens receive the primary care they want, need and require for the next generation and beyond," the report says.

There also needs to be a shift towards "prevention" in the way patients are treated – and away from simply handing out prescripti­ons.

Scots will be expected to take greater responsibi­lity for their own health, with "social prescribin­g" also becoming much more of the norm across the board.

The MSPS say more of a "cross government" approach is needed to successful­ly implement a preventati­ve approach.

In schools, this should see the introducti­on of healthy lifestyle strategies and knowledge of food and nutrition into the curriculum.

Local councils would also have a role to play in allowing planning for cycle tracks in towns and cities, as well as allowing communitie­s to use schools, churches and community centres for exercise.

Green spaces should also be protected from new buildings, the report adds.

The Scottish Government has committed to increase GP numbers by 800 by 2030, which the report says should also be "recast" to ensure there is instead a proportion­ate rise across "multi-disciplina­ry teams".

 ??  ?? 2 The committee said that Scots GPS can no longer be the ‘deliverer of all services’
2 The committee said that Scots GPS can no longer be the ‘deliverer of all services’

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