The Scotsman

Matheson facing calls to quit over ‘deadly disarray’ in A&E department­s

- Katrine Bussey newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Michael Matheson is facing fresh calls to quit as Health Secretary as figures show more than a third of patients in accident and emergency had to wait longer than the target time for care.

The latest waiting time figures for the week ending January 21 show 62 per cent of patients were either admitted, transferre­d or discharged within four hours. That is down from 64.1 per cent the previous weekandcon­tinuestobe­below the goal of having 95 per cent of patients dealt with in that time.

Mr Matheson said the service “remains under sustained pressure” and he conceded “waiting times are longer than we want them to be for some patients”.

But Scottish Labour health spokeswoma­n Dame Jackie Baillie hit out at the “deadly disarray in our A&E department­s”.

Insisting it is time for Mr Matheson to “step aside”, she added:“wesimplyca­nnothave thousands of lives being put in danger on a weekly basis due to this SNP government’s catastroph­ic failure to support our NHS and its hardworkin­g staff.

“Under Michael Matheson our NHS has lurched from crisis to crisis, while he has been preoccupie­d with saving his own job.”

The latest figures from Public Health Scotland show 23,615 patients attended A&E in the week to January 21 – with 8,963 waiting longer than the fourhour target time.

That includes 3,831 patients (16.2 per cent) who were in A&E for eight hours or more, and 1,912 (8.1 per cent) who spent 12 hours or longer there.

At the flagship Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow, almost two-thirds of patients spent more than four hours in A&E – with only 35.7 per cent admitted, transferre­d or discharged inside the target time.

Scottish Conservati­ve health spokesman Dr Sandesh Gulhane said: “These shameful and worsening figures expose the true crisis that plagues our A&E department­s after 16 years of the SNP’S dire workforce planningan­dmismanage­ment of our NHS.”

Dr Gulhane, who is a GP, said patients face “dangerous and unacceptab­le waits in our emergency wards”, insisting this is “simply not good enough”.

He added: “Excessive delays in A&E lead to unnecessar­y loss of life, yet Michael Matheson has failed to tackle this growing problem, instead continuing the legacy of NHS failure started by his predecesso­rs.

“If he refuses to quit, the discredite­d and distracted Health Secretary must finally get a grip on this crisis.”

Mr Matheson said: “Emergencyd­epartments­acrossscot­land are continuing to deal with heightened winter pressures, with similar demand being felt throughout the UK.

“Increased seasonal illness includingc­ovid,fluandnoro­virus and high levels of occupancy and delayed discharge are all contributi­ng to increased pressure on services. To tackle this, our delayed discharge and hospital occupancy action plan is being implemente­d at pace, delivering actions we know work to reduce delays, including early planning, deployment of multi-agency teams and involvemen­t of the patient, their family and carers.”

 ?? ?? Latest figures show more than a third of patients in Scotland’s accident and emergency department­s had to wait longer than the target time for care, with the service remaining ‘under sustained pressure’
Latest figures show more than a third of patients in Scotland’s accident and emergency department­s had to wait longer than the target time for care, with the service remaining ‘under sustained pressure’

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