FMQs: Nicola Sturgeon rejects claims that nurses in Scottish's largest health board are working 24-hour shifts
It has been reported that wards at Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) are “putting out urgent calls for staff”, with claims nurses working for NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde are being forced to work shifts lasting as long as a full day.
One nurse was reported to have appealed for shift cover help on Tuesday night in a Facebook group for QEUH employees, saying: “If I don’t stay, no-one will be here.”
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Hide AdThe allegations come after NHSGGC had apologised to patients on Wednesday as it announced a pause to non-urgent elective procedures and pledged to “make every possible effort to offer them an alternative date at the first opportunity”.
Ms Sturgeon was challenged on the reports by Scottish Tories leader Douglas Ross in the opening salvo at First Minister’s Questions on Thursday.
She said: “In relation to reports in the media this morning that staff in Greater Glasgow and Clyde are being asked to work 24-hour shifts, that, as I am assured by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and as the board has said publicly, is not true.
"Let me just quote NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde – ‘there is absolutely no truth to these claims. NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde does not ask nursing staff to work a 24-hour shift and there is no prospect that any staffing member would need to work for 24 hours. To suggest otherwise is inaccurate and misleading’.
"And I would not expect any health board to request any member of staff to do that.”
Ms Sturgeon added: “I think it insults people’s intelligence to suggest that the problems being encountered in the NHS in Scotland, which are the same as the problems being encountered elsewhere, are somehow down to the health secretary. Is it the fault of Humza Yousaf that the kind of action that Greater Glasgow and Clyde announced last night has also been taken in health services in south London, Surrey, York, Scarborough, in Derby, in Leicester, in Nottingham, in Southampton.”
Mr Ross highlighted reports there were now 60 avoidable deaths in Scotland’s NHS each week, according to the British Medical Association Scotland.
Mr Ross said: “The First Minister is doubling down on her patient-blaming language.”
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