Scotland Budget to provide record support for its health and social care services
The Scottish Government has announced efforts to clear waiting list backlogs, improve capacity, and remove blockages that keep some patients in hospital longer than necessary will be supported by £200 million if Parliament passes the Budget.
This funding will see more than 150,000 extra patients treated and expand the Hospital at Home programme by 600 beds.
The 2025-26 Budget, if approved by Parliament, will provide a record £21 billion for health and social care, including £16.2 billion for NHS Boards to deliver key services; £2.2 billion for Primary Care services, a 7.9 per cent increase, and an increase of £139 million in capital spending power, progressing the Belford Hospital, Monklands Hospital and Edinburgh Eye Pavilion projects.
Also included, £200 million will help to reduce waiting times and improve capacity, £3 million will be used to create additional dental training places, and an additional £5 million will be used for short breaks to support unpaid carers.
Health Secretary Neil Gray said: “This Budget has improving our NHS at its very heart and sees record funding of £21 billion for the health and social care portfolio. We are determined to improve NHS performance and our planned investment of £200 million to help clear long waits and improve capacity will help drive that vital progress.
“We are increasing funding for Primary Care by 7.9 per cent to more than £2.2 billion – this will help increase access and capacity, including delivering additional support for General Practice, a critical dental workforce and training package and enhancements to community eyecare,
“It is absolutely vital we ensure people have access to high-quality health, mental health, and social care services when and where they need them – that is why we are increasing our capital spending power by £139 million in 2025-26.
“These measures are key in driving forward our vision of a Scotland where people live longer, healthier and fulfilling lives. The funding outlined will support NHS reform and our efforts to improve population health with a focus on prevention and early intervention.
“We want to make progress on improving our NHS, but to do that, Parliament must approve our Budget Bill to unlock investment to drive long-term and lasting improvements – and the healthier population – that we all want to see.”
NHS Scotland partner InnoScot Health recently backed government efforts to promote workforce engagement on the need for digital transformation – and insists it is also integral to unlocking innovation ambitions.