The Scotsman

Halt to NHS building works ‘is a hammer blow to rural areas’

◆ Senior medics warn of impact after delays to plans to build a dozen new NHS hospitals, surgeries and treatment centres

- Joseph Anderson Health Correspond­ent

areas are set to be punished by a widespread pause on NHS building plans, senior medics have warned, as the impact was described as a "hammer blow' for areas outside the Central Belt.

Plans to build a dozen new NHS hospitals, surgeries and treatment centres have been delayed for at least two years, after the Scottish Government told health boards there is no money available for the countless building projects that had been planned.

This includes much-needed rural health infrastruc­ture in the Highlands, including a replacemen­t hospital in Fort William, upgrades to Caithness General Hospital, upgrades to the maternity unit at Raigmore Hospital in Inverness, and relocating two GP practices to Cowal Community Hospital in Dunoon.

Scottish Conservati­ve deputy health spokespers­on Tess White said rural patients and communitie­s were “once again being short-changed by this Central Belt obsessed Snp-green Government”.

“It is a hammer blow for my constituen­ts in Aberdeen that plans for a much-needed new treatment centre have now been delayed for two years, with other projects in NHS Grampian also being paused,” she said.

“The SNP have recklessly wasted record funding from the UK government and have mismanaged our NHS for 17 years and that impact is even greater in rural Scotland.

“Neil Gray – the new SNP health secretary – must address this situation urgently and ensure that patients in rural Scotland have easy access to healthcare services.

“If he needs somewhere to start, he should embrace our plans to deliver a modern, efficient and local approach to our NHS.”

Scottish Labour Highlands and Islands MSP Rhoda Grant said that “after years of centralisa­tion and neglect”, rural communitie­s in Scotland “already struggle to access vital healthcare”.

“These delays will be a hammer blow to rural Scotland, piling pressure on overstretc­hed services and putting patients at risk,” she said.

"The SNP must not make rural communitie­s pay the price for its failure.

“The health secretary must set out how he will protect patients and services in the absence of these badly needed upgrades."

Amongst the projects being delayed across Scotland is a network of ten treatment centres, which were expected to create at least 40,000 additional elective surgeries, diagnostic centres and other procedures a year by 2026.

Dr Iain Kennedy, chair of BMA Scotland, said the pressures faced by NHS Scotland were exacerbate­d in rural communitie­s.

“The fact that NHS Scotland is struggling to finance both the day-to-day running of services and the upkeep of the physical estate where care is delivered is having a profound impact across Scotland,” he said.

“This is felt acutely in urban areas, but the remote nature of rural health care, often spread across multirural

Rural communitie­s often feel isolated and sometimes at the bottom of the list Dr Iain Kennedy

ple smaller centres, means that problems with buildings here are often exacerbate­d.

“Rural communitie­s often feel isolated and sometimes at the bottom of the list for these kind of services, and while the capital pause will undoubtedl­y impact the whole of Scotland, people living in remote areas will feel it particular­ly keenly.

“That’s not least as GP premises are also, in many cases, in desperate need of improvemen­t, to provide the kind of spaces that are crucial to delivering modern care, rather than the Victorian-era buildings that are currently often relied on, and are simply no longer fit for purpose – both in terms of disabled access and the required space for all members of the practice team.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said the capital funding position was “extremely challengin­g”.

“The UK government did not inflation-proof its capital budget, which has resulted in nearly a 10 per cent real-terms cut in the Scottish Government’s capital funding over the medium term between 2023/24 and 2027/28,” the spokespers­on said.

“Our emphasis for the immediate future will be on addressing backlog maintenanc­e and essential equipment replacemen­t.

“As a result of the cut in our capital budget, a revised infrastruc­ture investment plan will be published in the spring and all due considerat­ion will be given to what projects can be included within that revised plan.”

Dr JP Loughrey, the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s vice-president for Scotland, said: “A long term lack of investment in the infrastruc­ture needed to provide appropriat­e and sufficient care for patients across Scotland, reductions in overall acute bed capacity, and amalgamati­ons of previous sites, means there is a widespread imbalance in demand and capacity, as outlined by the Audit Scotland report just published.

“The move to halt these developmen­ts is another blow to equity of care – and is a backward step.

“We should we investing in and developing our healthcare system, not sacrificin­g plans when finances are stretched.

“The NHS is not a ‘nice to have’ – it is a necessity and adequate investment is crucial.”

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 ?? ?? Upgrades to the maternity unit at Raigmore Hospital in Inverness is one of the projects on hold. Top, Rhoda Grant says rural communitie­s already struggle to access vital healthcare; ; Neil Gray has been told to address the situation urgently
Upgrades to the maternity unit at Raigmore Hospital in Inverness is one of the projects on hold. Top, Rhoda Grant says rural communitie­s already struggle to access vital healthcare; ; Neil Gray has been told to address the situation urgently
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