The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Call for health bosses to abandon plans to close out-of-hours service.

Dundee ‘too busy’ to cope with northeast Fife patients

- LEEZA CLARK leclark@thecourier.co.uk

Health bosses are being urged to abandon plans to close St Andrews’ GP out-of-hours service following the revelation a health centre in Dundee “often can’t cope” with north-east Fife referrals.

The future of Fife’s out-of-hours

(OOH) care will be revealed on

December 20.

Options put forward by Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p exclude a return of the midnight to 8am out-ofhours GP cover at St Andrews Community Hospital.

The service was axed at St Andrews, Glenrothes and Queen Margaret hospitals in April in a contingenc­y measure amid a reported staffing crisis.

Liberal Democrat MSP Willie Rennie said north-east Fife patients had been told previously it would be safer to close the St Andrews facility as they can easily travel to Kings Cross Hospital in Dundee to be seen.

But in response to a letter about the case of a constituen­t, Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p has stated “call handler experience is that often calls to Tayside result in being advised that their centre is busy and cannot meet the NHS time dispositio­ns, and that it would be two hours for an appointmen­t”.

“I hope this clarifies why the family was not offered an appointmen­t at Kings Cross.”

Mr Rennie said: “We were told that patients in north Fife would be seen at Dundee Kings Cross Hospital rather than being forced to travel to Kirkcaldy.

“Now we discover that NHS Tayside is often too busy to handle Fife patients.

“This must blow out of the water any suggestion that the St Andrews GP outof-hours facility should close. I am disappoint­ed that we have not been told this before now.”

A spokespers­on for Angus Health and Social Care Partnershi­p, which hosts out-of-hours services for NHS Tayside, said Tayside and Fife OOH services had a longstandi­ng agreement so patients from Tayport, Newport and Newburgh have the choice of being seen in Dundee or Perth.

Since April, when Fife’s contingenc­y plan started, that was temporaril­y extended to cover Cupar, Leuchars and St Andrews. This will run until January.

The spokespers­on added: “In common with other unschedule­d care services, OOH can sometimes experience periods of high demand.

“However, all patients referred to the service as part of the agreement with Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p have been seen by the OOH service within clinically appropriat­e timescales.

“Each patient is triaged by NHS 24 before being referred to the service.”

Confirming the contingenc­y arrangemen­ts, which will be reviewed at the end of January, Fife Health and Social Care divisional general manager Claire Dobson said: “We would like to reassure the public that people will be seen by out-of-hours services in a timely way and according to clinical need.

“Like many services the primary care emergency service faces periods of high demand.”

We would like to reassure the public that people will be seen by out-of-hours services in a timely way and according to clinical need

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 ?? Picture: Gareth Jennings. ?? Last month a 6,045 signature petition objecting to the closure of services was handed over to Simon Little, left, Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p chairman.
Picture: Gareth Jennings. Last month a 6,045 signature petition objecting to the closure of services was handed over to Simon Little, left, Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p chairman.

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