More than £21m was paid out to compensate for clinical negligence in the NHS last year, according to figures published today.
The official figures, which were revealed in a parliamentary answer to Conservative Shadow Health Secretary Jackson Carlaw MSP, show that the total sum rose by 280 per cent last year, increasing from £7.7m in 2005-06 to £21.5m in 2006-07.
Carlaw said that Scots will be “shocked” by the figures.
He said: “This dwarfs the £2.8m paid out during the first year of devolution and the previous post devolution high of £8.7m.
“At a time when taxes have risen to an all time high and we are constantly told that investment in our health service stands at record levels people have a right to ask why clinical negligence payouts are spiralling out of control.”
He said the figures also show significant regional variation, with payments rising from £59,000 to £7.2m in Lothian, from £288,000 to £4.4m in Forth Valley and from £1.8m to £2.5m in Highland.
He continued: “Perhaps the most striking aspect of the written answer is that Nicola Sturgeon provides no explanation for these increases.
“A series of further questions therefore spring to mind. Do these increases result from a growing number of more serious clinical errors, the ‘compensation culture’ or a bit of both? Who is being held accountable? Have staff been disciplined? What is the government doing to get to grips with this issue? What are the future implications for front line services?
“I shall be tabling additional parliamentary questions along these very lines to establish the full facts behind these alarming statistics.”
One person has commented on this article. 1. NHS clinical negligence payouts published Anonymous, Unregistered Has no-one told this guy that negligence claims can take up to 25 years to settle and it only takes 1-2 claims involving brain damaged babies to run up the millions that some Boards are paying out?
Variability in payout is normal. The main issues that emerge is that the cases being settled were instigated well before Trusts were created and then abolished, and before clinical standards were improved following the investment "boom"of the post -Millenium period.
He doesn't appear to have lived up to his commitment to establish the full facts, does he?
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