The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)
BMA boss to quit as staff fears mount
NHS: Doctor calls for urgent action
The head of the British Medical Association (BMA) in Scotland has called for an improved NHS staff-shortage system as he announced his early retirement from front-line medicine.
In an interview with a national newspaper, Dr Peter Bennie cited frustration with staff and bed shortages in the health service.
He said a system to divert staff to the departments most in need was urgently required.
Dr Bennie, consultant psychiatrist at Dykebar Hospital in Paisley, is to leave his post next month at the age of 55.
The outgoing chairman of BMA Scotland told the newspaper: “My own experience, when I am finishing a clinical day, is running over in my head the things I have not been able to do because there are not enough people to do the job as well as we would want to.”
Dr Bennie said there was a fear in the system that raising issues such as staff shortages “will not make any difference”.
He said: “One of the
“There is not enough people to do the job as well as we’d want”
things which makes my colleagues quite happy about retirement is that working as a doctor is increasingly stressful, because of the fear of what might go wrong and not being supported with that and the lack of sufficient colleagues to feel you can do the best job you can.” He has called for a reliable system to raise the alarm if a unit is struggling to cope, with extra staff brought in or patients diverted elsewhere.
A Scottish Government spokesman said: “Ministers appreciate the contribution Dr Bennie has made to the NHS and take the concerns he raises seriously.
“We are working to tackle these issues and that is why we are investing in NHS funding to deliver record high levels, and we continue to push the UK Government to deliver a net benefit to Scotland’s budget following their recent NHS funding announcement.”
The spokesman said that NHS Scotland’s workforce has increased by over 10% “under this government to historically high levels” and has risen by almost 500 in the past year alone.