The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Petition calling for better healthcare hits Holyrood

NHS: Move keeps issues of a ‘downgraded’ maternity service in spotlight

- BY IAIN RAMAGE

A 6,000-signature petition was delivered to the Scottish Government yesterday demanding improved NHS care in Caithness.

Campaigner­s were frustrated that Health Secretary Shona Robison was unable to receive it personally, instead handing it to Conservati­ve Highlands and Islands MS P Ed Mountain, who promised to deliver it. The latest protest by campaign group the Caithness Health Action Team (Chat) was aimed at keeping the issues of a “downgraded” maternity service and increased dependency on ambulances for hospital transfers to Inverness in the public arena.

Prior to visiting Holyrood, Chat members had sent symbolic plastic cows to each MSP, claiming livestock laws better protected cattle than NHS Scotland’s treatment of pregnant mothers.

Under EU law, it is illegal to transport heavily pregnant or labouring livestock or newborn calves.

Chat vice-chairwoman Kirsteen Campbell said: “We’ve definitely raised the profile by speaking with various MSPs and we’ll keep fighting.”

Mr Mountain accused local SNP MSP Gail Ross of attempting to “airbrush her constituen­ts out” by amending a motion he put to the parliament yesterday, in which he had congratula­ted the Chat campaign’s challenge to maternity service reforms.

Mrs Ross won support for her amendment, removing the word “congratula­tes” and any reference to the protest group. It noted the findings of the region’s public health director that safety concerns necessitat­ed reconfigur­ation of maternity services.

Mr Mountain later described the amendment as “shameful”.

Mrs Ross said the tone of his motion had been “totally inappropri­ate, demoralisi­ng for staff, worrying for prospectiv­e mothers and supported a campaign which was based on inaccurate informatio­n”.

She added: “Pregnant cow scan be transporte­d for medical reasons” andthat a campaign “comparing mothers to livestock was not something we should support as a parliament.”

A spokeswoma­n for the Scottish Government said: “The health secretary has asked that NHS Highland, who made the decision on grounds of safety, keep her informed of progress and to involve local residents in that process.”

 ??  ?? TAKE THAT: Susan Robertson of Chat hands the petition to Ed Mountain MSP, watched by, from left, Derek Bremner (Chat), Kirsteen Campbell (Chat), John Scott MSP, Douglas Ross MSP, Bill Fernie (Chat) and Donald Cameron MSP
TAKE THAT: Susan Robertson of Chat hands the petition to Ed Mountain MSP, watched by, from left, Derek Bremner (Chat), Kirsteen Campbell (Chat), John Scott MSP, Douglas Ross MSP, Bill Fernie (Chat) and Donald Cameron MSP

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