Nicola Sturgeon is accused of seeking “deceptive tactics” after criticizing Brexit for the shortage of staff that is causing the medical crisis that engulfs the Scottish NHS.
The First Ministry acknowledged that Scottish health work was “the most difficult thing in our lives” because of Covid, but declined to comment. was in “trouble”.
In an interview at the start of the SNP meeting this week, he said there was a shortage of staff in the NHS after Brexit canceled free exits on the Continent.
But opposition parties say the allegations are shameless because the labor crisis began more than a decade ago with Ms Sturgeon as Secretary of Health, when she reduced the number of student nurses.
Areas within the NHS have reached a “historic record”, with new figures showing that more than 500,000 facilities and nearly 5,000 nursing and nursing careers do not matter.
The British Medical Association (BMA) says Scotland contracted the plague in March last year with 15% of unplanned counseling sites and currently has a shortage of 800 GP.
The Red Cross was written
Ms. Sturgeon denied the next day Unite said Scots who called 999 for an ambulance met for six hours to wait until they were admitted to hospital due to a shortage of emergency and emergency beds.
This resulted in ambulances carrying sick patients parked outside the A&E departments for seven hours, waiting for the bed to become free. During this time no one answered the three immediate answers.
It was found that the Red Cross was rushed to a large hospital in Scotland for emergency services while ambulances lined up for hours.
The Daily Record reports that volunteers are offering tea, coffee and biscuits to charities, patients and relatives at Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital.
The number of bedbugs increased yesterday by 49 to 977 and the number of children admitted is the highest since the outbreak began.
The mind remains on freedom
But the first day of the SNP meeting instead looked at freedom, the party revealed that it had begun operating temporarily in Scotland.
Ms Sturgeon announced this week that she has called on government officials to begin drafting the “details” of the referendum they want to launch by the autumn of 2023.
Pressured by BBC Radio Scotland if the NHS is in crisis, he said: “It’s a serious health problem everywhere, that’s why we have to make difficult decisions like vaccination, and why we need to invest in health services, and that’s why we’ve warned for so long. and I am not saying that this is the key or a major driver of the problem in the health profession, and the lack of staff.
“We are seeing all our economy and jobs increasing due to Brexit.”
The Scottish Government released last month’s NHS recovery plan to address the effects of the epidemic with a promise to increase power by about 10% over the next five years.
But the BMA said the document failed to address the “serious environmental problem” that plagued many medical communities and warned that achieving what 10% did to those who were tired “put them at risk of extinction, exacerbating the problem.
Sturgeon ‘doesn’t know what’s ahead’
Interviewer Martin Geissler raised the concerns of a doctor who said the health profession has been struggling for a decade and it could take “more than a decade for things to get better”.
Asked how she could blame Brexit, Ms Sturgeon said: “I’m not saying Brexit is me. for managing this. “
But Dr Sandesh Gulhane, GP and Minister of Scottish Tories’ Shadow Public Health, said: “Nicola Sturgeon is clearly unaware of what is going on in front of our NHS.
“The First Minister denies the magnitude of the problem. Everything from the GP to the ambulance to A and E is full. These deceptive tactics are unfortunate.”
Jackie Baillie, a spokeswoman for Scottish Labor, said: “Nicola Sturgeon has set the stage for any willingness to relinquish any responsibility for the difficulties she has made in recruiting staff for the NHS.
“His shameless comments tell us everything we need to know about what the SNP puts forward – this is a party that prefers to hide rather than fix problems.”
Meanwhile, Sturgeon has ignored some of the changes he has made that make people aware of their gender identity as “illegal”.
Women’s groups have warned male feeders to take advantage of the change in the area to better facilities such as toilets and changing rooms.
The First Ministry said: “We need to focus on the threats to women, not the threats that, although I realize that some of these ideas are actually happening, in my opinion, are not true.”
He declined to be considered if ministers opposed to the law were allowed to vote against them but said the role of all parties was at stake.
Kate Forbes, Secretary of Finance and Religious Christian, is one of the SNP officials who urged the Scottish government not to “rush to” change “the meaning of men and women”.
Meghan Gallacher, of Tory MSP, said: “It is wrong for Nicola Sturgeon to ignore the many challenges women face in reducing their rights.”