The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Out-of-hours service to continue reduced form for six months

HEALTH: Move due to ongoing nursing and medical staff difficulti­es in bid to ensure patient safety in Fife

- LEEZA CLARK leclark@thecourier.co.uk

We have taken and will continue to take every step available to us to try and resume services. MICHAEL KELLET

Fife’s out-of-hours GP service is to continue in a controvers­ially reduced form for the next six months.

There has been widespread condemnati­on of the contingenc­y measures – brought in to overcome a shortage of staff cover – since their introducti­on at short notice in April.

The reduced service, which sees primary care emergency services only available at the Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy between midnight and 8am, was originally meant to run for only three months.

Just days before the date the provisions were supposed to end – and before a major consultati­on on the future of healthcare across Fife is launched – they have been extended for another six months, with a full review at the end of January.

The move, which has seen the out-ofhours service cut from Queen Margaret Hospital in Dunfermlin­e, Glenrothes Hospital and St Andrews Community Hospital, has been blamed on “ongoing nursing and medical staffing difficulti­es and has been taken to ensure patient safety.

There will be no change to the minor injuries unit at Queen Margaret.

Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p director Michael Kellet said: “The ongoing challenges we face have left us with no other option but to extend the contingenc­y measures to ensure patient safety.

“We have taken and will continue to take every step available to us to try and resume services.”

This included an advertisin­g drive to recruit nursing and GP staff and trying to encourage the workforce to support the service.

Paying tribute to staff “for the ongoing commitment to the people of Fife during this period of uncertaint­y and change”, he added: “Fife, like many other areas, is experienci­ng the impact of shortages of key staff. In response we have put in place the contingenc­y measures to ensure a safe and reliable service. In addition, we must look at solutions to secure safe and sustainabl­e services in the immediate and long term.

“This requires transforma­tion of traditiona­l health and social care ways of working and service models.”

The Joining Up Care consultati­on will be launched on Monday. Through the consultati­on the authoritie­s say they want to hear the widest range of voices, adding the partnershi­p is open to hearing ideas and suggestion­s as to how sustainabl­e services can be developed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom