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Scots hospital blasted after spending £48,000 on taxis to deliver paperwork

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Scots hospital blasted after spending £48,000 on taxis to deliver paperwork

Scotland’s flagship hospital has spent tens of thousands on taxis to deliver medicine and ­paperwork to patients.

Insiders say when someone is discharged from the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow, staff often fail to have prescriptions and ­paperwork ready before transport arrives to take them home.




They are sent home by ambulance then the paperwork or medication follows them a short time later by taxi.

An ambulance insider was so annoyed by what he sees as “a complete waste of money” he put in a freedom of information request to find out the scale of the problem.

He said: “The hospital wards routinely send medications and paperwork out by taxi after a patient has left the ward – I wish to establish how much money has been spent on this.”

The FOI revealed there has been a steady increase in the number of prescriptions sent out by ambulance since 2021.

The total bill from 2020 to May this year for delivering ­paperwork to patients by the same method is £5139.10, which brings the combined taxi bill to £48,373.87.

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