The Scotsman

Over 600 consultant vacancies missing from official figures

- Rebecca Mccurdy www.scotsman.com

Ministers have been accused of failing to provide a real picture of Scotland’s NHS crisis after figures revealed more than 600 consultant vacancies were missing from official statistics.

Official data published by the Scottish Government reported 439 vacancies, however figures obtained under freedom of informatio­n (FOI) laws by the British Medical Associatio­n (BMA) Scotland suggest the rate is more than double that.

The FOI figures show there are 1,076 whole-time equivalent vacancies, meaning the rate is 15.9 per cent – compared to 6.9 per cent reported in the official statistics.

Dr alan robertson, chairman of the BMA’S Scottish consultant­s committee, said the “missing” figures are enough to staff two large hospitals.

The difference in the figures is because official data does not include posts filled by locums, posts that have not yet been advertised, or posts that have remained vacant for so long they are no longer being advertised – whereas BMA data includes these.

Consultant vacancies also increased fromb mascot land' s December 2022 figure of 937 whole-time equivalent doctors.

Dr Robertson said the “missing” statistics come as “no surprise given the deepening medical workforce crisis we are clearly in”.

He added: “The Scottish Government needs to be honest, not only with the public, but also with those of us working in the NHS.

“When they declare‘ more doctors than ever before’, not only are they not accounting for the full scale of demand being put on services, but they are not being honest about the senior doctors we are missing from the workforce or how many more are needed.

“The failure to acknowledg­e the true scale of the problem reflects our wider concerns about the culture of fear, blame and lack of openness that often dominates debate about our NHS, which can prevent proper, open discussion on solutions.

“Morale is low across the profession, with the constant increase in pressure on thenhs and decline in time and resources meaning we simply cannot provide the level of care we want and that our patients deserve.

“We are constantly trying to plug gaps in rotas and make it through each shift one day at a time.”

Scottish Conservati­ve health spokesman Dr Sand es hGul ha ne, inset, said the BMA figures“expose the true–and terrifying–scale”of thenhs workforce crisis.

He added: “Repeated failures by successive SNP health secretarie­s have left critical services dangerousl­y understaff­ed and overwhelme­d.

“Th es np’ s only answer to their mismanagem­ent of Scotland’s finances has been to make us the highest taxed part of the United Kingdom, which as BMA Scotland point out, will only put off many consultant­s from coming to live and work here.”

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