A former Royal Navy engineer has had his hearing restored after discovering part of an old earbud had been stuck in his ear for five years.
30.10.2022 - 15:27 / dailyrecord.co.uk
Humza Yousaf has admitted it could take five years for the NHS in Scotland to recover from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The SNP health secretary spoke candidly today about the huge pressures facing the country's hospitals ahead of a challenging winter period.
Appearing on the Sunday Show on BBC Scotland, Yousaf was asked if the problems facing the health service were too big to be fixed.
He said: "I don't take a fatalistic view on that. The recovery is happening and it will take time - it will take years. I've got to be up front. The recovery is not going to happen in the course of winter.
"Scottish Labour brought a motion last week that did not contain a mention of covid. They essentially want the recovery done by this winter Well, the NHS is not going to recover by this winter. There will be fluctuations as you would imagine."
Yousaf added: "Our recovery plan is over five years and it is going to take at least five years, frankly. This winter is going to be, frankly, the most challenging the NHS has ever faced."
It comes after Labour last week accused Yousaf of being "the worst health secretary since devolution". The party called on the SNP minister to improve his winter plan for the health service or resign.
Jackie Baillie, Labour health spokeswoman, told MSPs that "thousands of people are waiting more than eight hours every week across Scotland" in A&E wards." It was also revealed last week that 4,069 patients waited more than 24 hours to be seen at emergency departments in Scotland in the last year – with others waiting up to two days for emergency care.
The figures for the year to September 25, 2022, show 859 people waited more than 36 hours to be assessed and either admitted, treated or discharged in A&E
A former Royal Navy engineer has had his hearing restored after discovering part of an old earbud had been stuck in his ear for five years.
Humza Yousaf has written to the UK Health Secretary Steve Barclay asking for more funding to help avert industrial action later this winter.
NHS senior managers have spent over £350million on agency staff in just 20 months, the Sunday Mail can reveal.
Boy George says he feels like he "was being poisoned" on the first eating trial of I'm A Celebrity 2022.
Scotland faces grinding to a halt this winter after teachers became the latest workers to vote for strikes yesterday - meaning they could soon join nurses and train drivers on picket lines.
Bohemian Rhapsody sings all the way to Number 1 in the all-time Top 20 biggest films on the Official Film Chart, according to new Official Charts Company data released in partnership with the British Association for Screen Entertainment (BASE).
Humza Yousaf has defended the Scottish Government committing a further £5 million to its climate justice fund in the same week as nurses were told "there is no more money".
A pensioner was forced to lie on a hospital trolley after a stroke for 21 hours because there were no beds.
NBA star Kyrie Irving has been suspended from playing basketball for his failure to “unequivocally say he has no antisemitic beliefs.”
Paul Haggis took the witness stand today in his Manhattan trial for sexual assault, and the Oscar-winning Crash filmmaker and former Church of Scientology member’s first words when asked by his lawyer Priya Chaudhry how it felt to be testifying were: “I’m incredibly nervous, of course, and I’m very happy. Because for five years I’ve been unable to clear my name.”
The number of police officers in Scotland has plummeted to its lowest level in 14 years.
Former UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock has been suspended as a Conservative MP for being a contestant on I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here!.
A suspect has finally been charged with the murder of of two teen girls in Delphi — over five years after their deaths.
Humza Yousaf has been branded the "worst health secretary since devolution" by Labour in a row over how prepared the NHS is for winter.
Scotland’s poorest people are 74 per cent more likely to die from cancer than the better off, a damning report has shown. Figures published yesterday by Public Health Scotland showed the huge inequality in deaths from the disease over the last decade.