Scots ‘need a Nightingale hospital’ to ease NHS crisis
SCOTLAND’S NHS crisis has become so bad that GPS say they need a Nightingale hospital to cope, with 200 British troops set to be called in to prop up the Snp-run health service.
A senior family doctor claimed that closing the NHS Louisa Jordan may be “one of the worst decisions” of the pandemic taken by Nicola Sturgeon.
The First Minister revealed on Thursday that she was to formally seek assistance from the British Army, after a scandal in which a pensioner died at home after waiting 40 hours for an ambulance to arrive.
It was confirmed yesterday that soldiers are to drive NHS ambulances, while others will run mobile coronavirus testing units which had previously been crewed by Scottish Ambulance Service workers.
The £70million Louisa Jordan was closed in July, but Ms Sturgeon is now considering setting up temporary admissions wards elsewhere.
The building that hosted the Louisa Jordan, the Scottish Events Campus in Glasgow, is now being used to host events such as concerts and WWE wrestling, before it hosts the COP26 climate summit in November.
John Montgomery, chairman of the South Glasgow GP committee, warned of a “looming winter crisis” for the health service.
In an interview with the BBC, he said: “Given that the critical problem we face right now is lack of beds, and the Louisa Jordan was set up effectively as a field hospital.
“The Louisa Jordan would have been a perfect place for patients who might not have required necessarily highintervention levels of medicine, perhaps required nursing care, and would have been a perfect place for ambulances to take patients to.”
Ms Sturgeon has blamed the current crisis on coronavirus. However, Prof Michael Griffin, president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, warned Scotland has “a real workforce problem in the NHS and in social care”.