The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Woman collapses as weather causes vaccinatio­n chaos

COVID: NHS chief apologises for ‘unacceptab­le’ jab delays

- JAMIE BUCHAN

Hundreds of elderly people were forced to wait for hours in the freezing cold as Fife’s Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme turned to chaos yesterday.

One woman reportedly collapsed with suspected hypothermi­a outside Lochgelly Centre and long queues formed at other community clinics across the region.

NHS chief executive Carol Potter last night offered her “sincere apologies” to those affected, and described the situation as “entirely unacceptab­le”.

The health board said appointmen­ts allocated for its clinics had been overbooked. Steps are being taken to investigat­e the problem and prevent it from happening again.

Problems were reported in Anstruther,

Lochgelly, Buckhaven, Glenrothes and

Kirkcaldy.

All patients who didn’t get their jabs yesterday will be offered reschedule­d appointmen­ts.

NHS Fife said the supply of the vaccine remains good, and the extra appointmen­ts can be met within existing stocks.

An elderly woman is understood to have collapsed with suspected hypothermi­a as wintry weather and overbookin­gs caused chaos at vaccinatio­n centres throughout Fife and Tayside.

Hundreds of pensioners were left standing for hours in the snow and ice, with lengthy queues reported at Caird Hall in Dundee, and community clinics in Kirkcaldy, Lochgelly, Anstruther, Buckhaven and Glenrothes.

A number of exhausted pensioners outside Lochgelly Centre were eventually sent home and told to re-book for later in the week.

NHS Fife said that appointmen­ts at its clinics had been overbooked, leading to “unacceptab­le queues”.

The health board said it was working with national schedulers to investigat­e and take steps to prevent it happening again.

Chief executive Carol

Potter branded the situation “entirely unacceptab­le” and apologised to those affected.

In Dundee city centre, hundreds queued for about an hour and extra vaccinator­s were drafted in to deal with the bottleneck.

NHS Tayside chiefs apologised for the delays and said it would review arrangemen­ts.

The distressin­g scenes come after NHS Fife pledged to learn lessons from its shambolic flu vaccinatio­n programme last year.

Labour MSP Alex Rowley branded the latest debacle “bordering on criminal”.

He has written to NHS Fife chairwoman Tricia Marwick and the chief executive to demand an explanatio­n.

“It’s just incredible to have old people on one of the coldest days of the year standing for over an hour because they have a backlog,” he said.

“One woman collapsed with suspected hypothermi­a outside Lochgelly.”

John Davidson, 74, and his 73-year-old wife Doreen were among around 120 people queuing at Rothes Halls in Glenrothes at one point.

He said: “There were about 50 or 60 people in front of us that I could see and the same behind us.

“It was absolutely freezing and there were people in wheelchair­s outside with the snow coming down.

“There was no place to sit, so we all had to stand.”

Kenny Smith, from Kelty, called for someone to be held accountabl­e after his mother-in-law waited more than two hours outside Lochgelly Centre.

“There are people in their late 70s who have been outside for well over an hour,” he said.

In Kirkcaldy, people waiting to be vaccinated at Templehall Community Centre queued round the block.

NHS Fife chief executive Carol Potter said: “I want to offer our most sincere apologies to those who had to wait in significan­t queues at some of our community vaccinatio­n clinics today.

“This was entirely unacceptab­le and we are working with our colleagues in NHS National Services Scotland to understand how this scheduling error occurred and ensure that it does not happen again.

“We know that local people are incredibly keen to get vaccinated as quickly as possible against Covid-19 and we have prioritise­d prompt actions to expand the capacity and quicken the flow of patients through our clinics.

“Patients who could not be vaccinated today will be contacted directly and will be offered a reschedule­d appointmen­t as quickly as possible.”

A spokeswoma­n for NHS Tayside said: “We are aware that some patients experience­d a longer wait today at the Caird Hall for their vaccinatio­n appointmen­t and we would like to thank them for their patience and apologise for their wait.

“Due to the adverse weather conditions, the queue was longer than expected due to a combinatio­n of factors.

“Some patients arrived late for their appointmen­ts and some patients arrived early, which meant more people than planned attended at the same time.

“The weather also meant that some staff were not able to get to the site.

“Due to the need to maintain two metres distance between people, there is a limited capacity to hold people inside the venue.”

She said more vaccinator­s were brought in to increase the flow of people and the team was reviewing its plans to see if other changes were necessary.

 ??  ?? VACCINATIO­N CHAOS: People queue in the freezing conditions – many of them forced to wait for more than an hour – to receive their Covid-19 jab at the Caird Hall in Dundee and, top right, at Randolph Wemyss Memorial Hospital in Buckhaven.
VACCINATIO­N CHAOS: People queue in the freezing conditions – many of them forced to wait for more than an hour – to receive their Covid-19 jab at the Caird Hall in Dundee and, top right, at Randolph Wemyss Memorial Hospital in Buckhaven.
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