The Scotsman

Serious compensati­on payouts in health service quadruple in a year

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Compensati­on payouts for failures in care in Scotland’s NHS have quadrupled in a year and are at their highest since the 2014 independen­ce referendum.

The Scottish Government’s most recent publicatio­n of their consolidat­ed accounts states a total of £67.77 million was paid out in the most serious cases of clinical negligence or breaches of the duty of care within the NHS, with the number of cases jumping by 10 to 35 overall.

The total payout is more than the four years prior combined, and the highest figure since Nicola Sturgeon became First Minister in 2014.

The numbers will increase pressure on the Health Secretary, Humza Yousaf, who is facing calls to resign from both Scottish Labour and the Scottish Conservati­ves over the crisis facing Scotland’s health service following the Covid-19 pandemic.

Opposition parties claim the current crisis, which has seen accident and emergency waiting times plunge to record lows, waiting lists for treatments grow, and the threat of strikes from nurses and doctors, has not been adequately responded to by Mr Yousaf.

Dr Andrew Buist, chair of the General Practition­ers Committee within BMA Scotland, said the pressures on GPS was resulting in patients struggling to get appointmen­ts and practices no longer being able to sustain a service. He told the BBC’S The Sunday Show that his “real fear” was GP services were now at a “tipping point”.

He said: “My real fear is that we are at a tipping point and what we’re going to see is areas of Scotland that are underdocto­red, and that is most likely to happen in areas of higher deprivatio­n, so the care of these patients is going to suffer.”

Clinical compensati­on payouts for claims worth more than £300,000 skyrockete­d last year to almost £68m. No reason was provided as to why the figure is so high or whether the cases are due to negligence or influenced by factors such as understaff­ing or a lack of resource.

In the financial year 2021-22, the Scottish Government paid out £67.77 mas part of the most serious claims, the highest figure in available consolidat­ed accounts which date back to 2014/15 and the second highest since 2015-16 when £36.96m was paid out.

This included £22.6 min compensati­on paid out by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, who last breached double figures in 201516 when it paid out £10.9m. NHS Lothian also paid out £19.7m last year, its first double figure amount since 2015-16 when it paid out £10.3m.

Jackie Baillie, health spokeswoma­n for Scottish Labour, said the figures were “eyewaterin­g”. She said: “Our NHS is in full-blown crisis, with Scotland's do-nothing Health Secretary nowhere to be seen.

“This is an eye-watering jump in the number of compensati­on claims which will raise eyebrows across the county. We cannot have our already cash-strapped NHS put at further financial risk. "

The Scottish Government claimed that the figures fluctuate due to the length of time claims take to be settled, but provided no explanatio­n for the rapid and significan­t increase in payouts.

 ?? ?? ↑ Humza Yousaf, the Health Secretary, is facing pressure over the performanc­e of the health service
↑ Humza Yousaf, the Health Secretary, is facing pressure over the performanc­e of the health service

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