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Winter crisis to hit NHS, claims Labour

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Published Date: 11 January 2009
LABOUR yesterday warned that the NHS was facing a winter crisis and criticised the Scottish Government for cutting hospital beds.
Health spokeswoman Cathy Jamieson revealed official figures which indicate the number of available beds fell by more than 100 to 17,341 last year from 17,459 the previous year.

The party has also highlighted heating problems at the Southern Genera
l Hospital in Glasgow, while Labour MSP Michael McMahon claimed last week that his 77-year-old mother-in-law spent eight hours on a trolley at Monklands Hospital because no beds were available.

Jamieson said: "Nicola Sturgeon's complacency has left the NHS more exposed to a winter crisis than at any time in the last decade.

"There is no excuse for hospital wards without adequate heating or elderly patients spending hours on trolleys because of bed shortages.

"One of my first priorities as health secretary would be to increase the number of NHS beds. I am disappointed that the SNP's budget does not show nearly enough ambition for the NHS and will not create a single extra NHS bed.

"What we have seen this week is unforgivable. We need to start building on a much grander scale to ensure it doesn't happen again."

However, Jamieson's remarks sparked a furious reaction from the SNP, who pointed out that Labour cut 1,300 beds during its term in office.

A spokesman for Nicola Sturgeon said: "Cathy Jamieson should be red with embarrassment at issuing such a hypocritical statement.

"One of the reasons they were flung out of office in Scotland was their abysmal failure on health.

"And under Labour the number of beds in the Scottish NHS fell by 1,300.

"Under a Labour Government there are obvious reasons why bed numbers have reduced over time. We need fewer long-stay beds to cater for elderly or disabled people, who can increasingly be cared for in their homes or the community, medical advances reduce the length of hospital stays, many procedures are now done on an out-patient basis, and the NHS in Scotland is making better use of available beds."

Calling for an apology from Jamieson, the spokesman added: "Labour's baseless scaremongering is outrageous, and an insult to the hardworking staff whose efforts are delivering first-class NHS services over the winter months."

And he pointed out that if Labour had been returned to office in 2007, it would have closed the A&E units at Monklands and Ayr.

"The SNP saved the A&E units, and we are building a brand new Southern General Hospital," he said.





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  • Last Updated: 10 January 2009 7:33 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Scottish Labour Party
 
1

webwise,

Scotland 11/01/2009 00:10:12
'blah, blah, blah ... claims Labour'

I can't be bothered with these articles anymore, what's going on in the Scottish press at the moment?
2

Breezy,

Argyll 11/01/2009 01:18:47
The real '' Winter Crisis,'' to hit the NHS lasted over a decade and was called the Labour Party.
3

glassbenmhor,

11/01/2009 03:05:37
AND SPRING CRISIS TO HIT NEW LABOUR!!!
4

connaughtboy,

stonehaven 11/01/2009 08:20:36
This story exposes the sheer nastiness of Labour in Scotland. You get the impression that they revel in bad news stories. I suppose we shouldn't be surprised. Mags Curran showed her true colours at Glasgow East when she said her first priority was the Labour party. I think this applies to the whole sorry bunch.
5

donald,

glasgow 11/01/2009 08:26:18
Wishful thinking from Grey Broons.
6

Marian,

11/01/2009 09:52:09
The only crisis in the NHS in Scotland is the excessive payments having to be made by the NHS to private financiers thanks to New Labour's PFI/PPP legacy.
7

Mr. Lachie Todd,

Edinburgh 11/01/2009 10:36:47
Cynicism and self-interest comes to mind regarding this matter?

The Labour Party in Scotland must have been praying for the recent spell of Arctic weather to continue and Ms. Jamieson and Mr.McMahon are more than well aware that the winter period always places undue pressures on the NHS everywhere in the UK.

Where would Mr. McMahon's mother have gone if the Scottish Government had not rescinded Labour's plans to close the A & E at Monklands?

The Scottish Government is also committed to replacing the ageing Southern General with a new publicly funded hospital.
8

Jimmy Le Pie,

11/01/2009 11:23:59
Thursday will follow Wednesday, claims New Labour Sleaze.

The sun rises in the East, claims New Labour Sleaze.

It can get cold in winter, claims New Labour Sleaze.

We are the only party who should govern Scotland, claims New Labour Sleaze.
9

subrosa,

11/01/2009 12:34:14
This story is pumped out by the Scottish media every winter. Good defence by the Scottish government. Labour had closed several wards in my local hospitals over the years.
10

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11/01/2009 13:55:06
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11

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11/01/2009 16:01:51
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12

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11/01/2009 17:06:14
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11/01/2009 17:09:31
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14

victorm,

glasgow 11/01/2009 17:35:01
Elderly people lying on trolleys for hours is totally unacceptable, but not a new occurence. I have personal experience of my own parents (in their eighties) and others in the family of a similar age being left in that situation until a bed is found - and this happened before the SNP came into Government. Labour policies over decades have contributed to the understaffing and lack of beds (and soon, I fear the lack of hospitals) at the NHS. How they must be rubbing their hands together to think that they can now blame the SNP. Well, I for one am not fooled and know where the blame really lies. Here's hoping the SNP can improve the situation - if they are given the time and money to sort it out.
15

Brian Hill,

11/01/2009 17:46:40
Yes I long for the return of Labour where each immaculately clean, germ free ward had beds a plenty lying waiting for patients, though in reality we were all so happy under Labour very few of us were ill.

No trolleys for us in those days, michty me I remember once walking into The Royal in Edinburgh.

Within minutes of me approaching reception I found my self in bed with several specialists in attendance and a crack team of surgeons waiting scrubbed and ready to operate such was the efficiency under Labour.....

...there was much amusement all round when it was discovered I was only asking for directions to ward 9 where Aunt Fiefy was recovering with her Gald Bladder 'n that....

Roll on the next election.....
16

bully wee alba,

Edinburgh 11/01/2009 18:01:18
Lest we forget, this is the legacy left by the previous Labourtory/Libdum coalition.

“The use of PFI by the NHS in Scotland is a source of severe financial problems for health boards with major operational schemes. The annual cost to Scotland’s 14 health boards is currently £107 million. This is met from revenue budgets – money that is usually earmarked for running costs such as staffing, equipment, and clinical services.
However the PFI programme is projected to expand in scale, with the capital value of operational projects rising from £475 million in 2005-06 to an estimated £2.1 billion by the early part of the next decade. We estimate that the additional cost of meeting the unitary charge on these planned schemes will increase from £107 million in 2005-6 to almost £0.5 billion a year, about £300 million of which will be the availability charge.
Without a major increase in public expenditure, more of the NHS budget will be diverted away from services to private companies, making already serious financial problems more severe, and creating new pressures for hospital, community, and primary care service closures in the medium and long term.”

Need I say more?
17

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11/01/2009 18:48:40
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