Fears that patient safety may be put in danger by overworked and tired staff were raised today amid warnings that some surgeons and nurses in the Lothians have been working seven days a week solidly for three months. Staff are said to be clocking up 72 hours every week.
Some NHS Lothian staff members – such as surgeons, anaesthetists and theatre nurses – are being offered extra shifts at evenings and at weekends, as part of the effort to reduce the number of patients waiting longer than the target of 12 weeks for treatment.
NHS Lothian employee director and former vice-chairman Eddie Egan, who raised the issue with the board. He said: “We need to get the waiting list numbers down, but I’m speaking to people working seven days a week and they’ve been doing that for three months in high-pressure environments. I am concerned that staff are being put under pressure. People are feeling morally obliged to turn up, even if they’re exhausted, because they know patients will be cancelled if they don’t. It’s potentially putting patients in danger. If you’re working seven days a week, in evenings and are possibly on call, it reaches a point where you have to query – are people safe?”
MSP Margo MacDonald said "Think of people with driving jobs who are not allowed to drive for too many hours because they need sleep and rest. If that’s true for drivers it’s certainly true for surgeons and nurses.”
Tom Waterson, Lothian branch chairman for Unison, said “No-one should be working more than 48 hours in one week,” he said. “The working time directive was not brought in to save money, it was brought in to protect health.”
Some NHS Lothian staff members – such as surgeons, anaesthetists and theatre nurses – are being offered extra shifts at evenings and at weekends, as part of the effort to reduce the number of patients waiting longer than the target of 12 weeks for treatment.
NHS Lothian employee director and former vice-chairman Eddie Egan, who raised the issue with the board. He said: “We need to get the waiting list numbers down, but I’m speaking to people working seven days a week and they’ve been doing that for three months in high-pressure environments. I am concerned that staff are being put under pressure. People are feeling morally obliged to turn up, even if they’re exhausted, because they know patients will be cancelled if they don’t. It’s potentially putting patients in danger. If you’re working seven days a week, in evenings and are possibly on call, it reaches a point where you have to query – are people safe?”
MSP Margo MacDonald said "Think of people with driving jobs who are not allowed to drive for too many hours because they need sleep and rest. If that’s true for drivers it’s certainly true for surgeons and nurses.”
Tom Waterson, Lothian branch chairman for Unison, said “No-one should be working more than 48 hours in one week,” he said. “The working time directive was not brought in to save money, it was brought in to protect health.”
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