Edinburgh Evening News

MSPs in constructi­ve meeting with new health secretary

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Lothian MSPs say they have had a “constructi­ve” meeting with Health Secretary Neil Gray over Edinburgh’s promised new eye hospital.

Tory MSP Miles Briggs, Labour's Sarah Boyack and Edinburgh Northern and Leith SNP MSP Ben Macpherson, met Mr Gray on Thursday morning. It was the first time a cross-party group had held talks on the much-delayed project with the new Health Secretary, who took over the role just seven weeks ago from Michael Matheson after he quit over an £11,000 data roaming bill.

The Scottish Government first agreed to a new eye hospital in 2018 as a replacemen­t for the existing Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion which was declared not fit for purpose in 2014. But ministers then cancelled the project in December 2020 before the then First Minister Nicola Sturgeon did a U-turn during the 2021 Holyrood election campaign and said the hospital would go ahead after all. But in December, the government ordered a two-year freeze on all new major NHS capital projects which meant all work on the new eye hospital was halted. Lothian MSPs have voiced fears that the current Eye Pavilion could become unusable before a replacemen­t can be built.

Mr Briggs said despite the two-year freeze Mr Gray had hinted the government was looking for potential additional funding options to take forward some projects before the freeze expires.

Mr Briggs said: "I was pleased to be able to secure the cross-party meeting with Neil Gray and explain the level of concern and anger of residents across Lothian over the decision by SNPGreen Ministers to pause the project to build a new Edinburgh eye hospital. It is essential that we see urgent progress to take forward the project at the earliest opportunit­y and for NHS Lothian to receive our fair share of funding for capital projects. I welcome the constructi­ve discussion­s the Health Secretary has agreed to take forward on potential routes to fund the new Edinburgh eye hospital and will continue to make the case for this vital health infrastruc­ture investment."

He said it was clear that NHS Lothian faced huge pressures with major population growth while receiving the lowest level of funding of any health board per head of population.

 ?? ?? Former health secretary Michael Matheson, left, pictured in the Scottish Parliament alongside his replacemen­t in the health portfolio, Neil Gray
Former health secretary Michael Matheson, left, pictured in the Scottish Parliament alongside his replacemen­t in the health portfolio, Neil Gray
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