Almost 80,000 patients living in rural Scotland have had to travel outside their local health board area to be treated in the last five years, the Scottish Conservatives can reveal today.
Freedom of Information request responses to the party from health boards including NHS Ayrshire and Arran, Borders, Dumfries and Galloway, Grampian, Highland, Orkney, Shetland, Tayside and Western Isles show 77,150 patients had to travel elsewhere for treatment between 2018-19 and 2022-23.
NHS Grampian was responsible for the most transfers, with 21,092 patients based in the area ultimately being treated in another health board area.
NHS Western Isles also revealed that one patient had to travel an astonishing 319 miles to be treated.
Shadow health secretary Dr Sandesh Gulhane says that the “jaw-dropping” figures fully expose the SNP’s “dire NHS workforce planning” and show that patients in rural and remote areas are a “complete afterthought” for them.
He has urged SNP health secretary Michael Matheson to rip up Humza Yousaf’s flimsy and failed NHS recovery plan and outline a clear strategy that ensures rural health boards have every resource they need to treat patients who live in their area.
Scottish Conservative shadow health secretary Dr Sandesh Gulhane MSP, said: “These jaw-dropping figures are further proof of how this SNP-Green government are failing rural Scotland at every turn.
“Patients who are already stressed enough about undergoing treatment should not suffer the further anxiety of having to travel away from their local area to be treated elsewhere.
“It is scarcely believable that one patient had to travel over 300 miles just to be treated. The buck stops with the SNP.
“The dire workforce planning of successive SNP health secretaries has left our rural health boards dangerously short of staff – and patients are continuing to suffer badly as a result.
“With almost 80,000 patients affected in the last five years, it is clear that patients in rural and remote areas are a complete afterthought for the SNP-Green government.
“Michael Matheson has been left an almighty mess by Humza Yousaf in trying to fix Scotland’s NHS. He should start by ripping up his predecessor’s failed NHS recovery plan and urgently outline fresh ideas to support burnt-out staff and let-down patients.
“These damming stats underline why I’ve put forward my own plans to deliver a modern, local and efficient NHS. If the SNP do not match these ambitious proposals, more and more patients in remote parts of Scotland are going to be cut off from accessing healthcare on their own doorstep.”
Notes
Almost 80,000 patients in rural areas have had to travel outside their health board for treatment in the last five years. Between 2018-19 and 2022-23, 77,150 had to travel to another health board for treatment. NHS Grampian saw the most transfers to other health boards, with 21,092 transfers. (Scottish Conservative FOI, 14 June 2023, available on request).
Patients are being forced to travel over 300 miles for treatment. Whilst most health boards failed to provide data on how far patients were having to travel, NHS Western Isles said the furthest distance a patient had travelled was 319 miles. (Scottish Conservative FOI, 14 June 2023, available on request).
This data comes from some of Scotland’s most rural health boards. This data was obtained from: Ayrshire & Arran, Borders, Dumfries & Galloway, Grampian, Highland, Orkney, Shetland, Tayside and Western Isles. (Scottish Conservative FOI, 14 June 2023, available on request).