The Scotsman

Welcome, Neil Gray, to your grim, overflowin­g in-tray

◆ The SNP’S new health secretary has vowed to reform and improve the NHS… easier said than done, writes Jackie Baillie

- Jackie Baillie is MSP for Dumbarton, Scottish Labour’s deputy leader and her party’s spokespers­on for health

With Michael Matheson out the door with his reputation in tatters the new health secretary Neil Gray has vowed to “reform” and to “improve”.

Well, I do welcome Neil Gray to his post but talk is cheap, certainly cheaper than the ipad data bill Michael Matheson attempted to fob off on the taxpayer without a scintilla of shame.

The truth facing Mr Gray is that the SNP has presided over a decade and half of decline in our NHS with no marked reform or change.

The Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) report out last week, a kind of welcome card for Neil Gray, laid out the situation in bald figures.

Analysing the figures for Spring 2023, it detailed how the Scottish NHS handled eight per cent fewer emergency admissions, day patients and outpatient appointmen­ts than before the pandemic.

There were also 21 per cent fewer elective inpatient admissions, all despite higher funding and more staff than in the year before the pandemic.

This report should be a wake-up call for Neil Gray, as the state of the NHS should have been to Michael Matheson and, before him, Humza Yousaf.

A succession of SNP health secretarie­s failed upwards while the NHS declined on their watch.

The IFS weather report is only part of the bulging in-tray left for Mr Gray by the ipad king. Almost one in six people in Scotland are on waiting lists from the NHS. That is 830,000 people and it is an extraordin­ary and shocking number.

We're not doing enough to pull that back. In fact, it is getting worse not better. If you look in particular at cancer waiting times, where we have not met the 31 or 62 day targets for treatment, the situation is frightenin­g.

Everybody knows that the sooner you detect cancer, the more likely you are to get a better outcome. Now people are presenting at much later stages.

The list goes and we are seeing people regularly wait over 12 hours at Accident & Emergency department­s when there is a need to be seen.

The new health secretary appears determined to press on with the National Care Service, which is a flawed piece of legislatio­n at a time when packages for social care are fraying and social care staff are really struggling.

All these unresolved issues and more are sitting in Neil Gray’s in-tray.

He can talk about reform, he can talk about improvemen­t, but the evidence that people see with their own eyes is that after years of the SNP it has delivered none of that.

What we hear and what we know is that people want change, in the NHS and in the government.

That change is the Labour Party and this weekend at our Scottish conference, and in the months to come, we’ll outline how we modernise the NHS, drive down waiting lists and empower clinicians to deliver for patients.

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 ?? ?? Neil Gray has a big job ahead to deliver significan­t improvemen­t to Scotland’s NHS
Neil Gray has a big job ahead to deliver significan­t improvemen­t to Scotland’s NHS

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