Current provision of healthcare is the responsibility of 14 geographically based local NHS boards, six national special health boards, supported by
Public Health Scotland, plus many small contractors for primary care services. Hospitals, district nursing services and healthcare planning are managed by health boards. Government policy has been to use the
National Waiting Times centre to address waiting lists and limit use of the private sector.
Budget NHS Scotland had an operating budget of
£15.3billion in 2020/21. The
2025–26 Scottish budget allocated an annual budget of £21 billion to NHS Scotland, an increase of £139 million from the previous years budget. More than 12,000 of these healthcare staff are engaged under independent contractor arrangements. Descriptions of staff numbers can be expressed as headcount and by Whole-Time Equivalent (WTE) which is an estimate that helps to take account of full and part-time work patterns. Scotland's healthcare workforce includes: • around 67,000
nurses,
midwives and
health visitors (providing around 58,000 WTE) • over 4,900
consultants (providing around 4600 WTE) • more than 4,800
general practitioners (providing around 3,700 WTE) • more than 500
nurse practitioners and 1,600 registered nurses working in GP surgeries. •
dentists • around 4,000
pharmacists, mostly working in
community pharmacy positions, with around 1,200 retail pharmacies across Scotland. •
opticians •
allied health professionals • Healthcare scientists play an important role in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of a wide range of medical conditions, as well as in rehabilitation. Healthcare science staff are essential members of the healthcare team. • administrators, clerical and domestic staff.
Primary care To have access to NHS services, patients should register with a
General Practice. Most often this will be an independent contractor who has agreed to provide
general medical services to patients, funded on a capitation basis, with weighting given for the age distribution, poverty, and rurality. Various services are provided free of charge by
General Practitioners (GPs), who are responsible for maintaining a comprehensive medical record, usually affording some continuity of care. There is no option to self-refer to specialists in Scotland unlike many European countries. GP surgeries consist of partner GPs who are responsible for running the practice, and may include GPs employed by the practice and paid a salary, but who do not have any responsibility in running the surgery. In some instances, GPs are directly employed by the local health board, such as in parts of the Highlands and Islands. The NHS in Scotland also covers
dentistry for patients who have registered with a dentist who has agreed to provide services to NHS patients. Most dentists in Scotland have a mixture of NHS patients and
private patients. Check-ups are free, however dentists charge patients a regulated fee. Patients in Scotland must pay up to 80% of the total cost of the treatment unless they qualify for free treatment or help with costs. Dentists are remunerated through a voucher towards treatment and patients can choose to have more expensive treatments if they are willing and able to do so. This is mostly commonly seen with
dental amalgam restorations on molars, which are available on the NHS, whereas
composite resin restorations are not. The patient 'opts-out' of the NHS treatment and pays for the composite restoration as temporary private patient, but remains an NHS patient for future checkups.
Community pharmacies in Scotland also provide prescribed medicines free of charge, where the patient is registered with a GP Surgery based in Scotland, and where the appropriate prescription-voucher is given. Like GPs, they are private providers who deliver NHS services under contract. Pharmacists are increasingly delivering services which were once the responsibilities of GPs, such as flu vaccinations as well as offering advice on skin problems, gastrointestinal problems and other minor illnesses. Pharmacies in Scotland are frequently located inside Chemists' shops and supermarkets. While there are no
prescription charges in Scotland, prescription-vouchers are not ordinarily given in Scotland for certain medicines - such as
acetominophen and
ibuprofen - as these are available without a prescription at very low prices in most chemists and supermarkets. Most
optometrists in Scotland also provide NHS services, and provide
eye examinations, which includes retinal health checks and other eye screening services in addition to sight tests. Entitlements are mainly for corrective lenses and a predetermined set of frames - which were once known as 'NHS glasses' which attracted some social stigma until the range of frames was extended.
Secondary care is the largest NHS hospital within
Ayrshire and Arran. Hospital services are delivered directly by the National Health Service in Scotland. Since devolution, Scottish healthcare policy has been to move away from market-based solutions and towards direct delivery, rather than using the private or voluntary sectors. Proposals for the establishment of fifteen NHS boards were announced by the
Scottish Executive Health Department in December 2000. Further details about the role and function of the unified NHS health boards were provided in May 2001. From 1 October 2001 each geographical health board area had a single NHS board that was responsible for improving health and health services across their local area, replacing the previous decision-making structures of 43 separate boards and trusts. In April 2004, Scotland's health care system became an integrated service under the management of NHS boards. Local authority nominees were added to board membership to improve co-ordination of health and
social care. The remaining 16 Trusts were dissolved from 1 April 2004.
Hospitals are now managed by the
acute division of the NHS board.
Primary care services such as GPs and pharmacies would continue to be contracted through the NHS board, but from 2004 were considered part of the remit of
Community Health Partnerships (CHPs), structures based largely on
local authority boundaries and including local authority membership of their boards. By April 2014, there were new joint working arrangements in place between the NHS boards and local authorities came into effect that also included responsibility for social care. Their new organisations, which took over from CHPs are called
Health and Social Care Partnerships (HSCPs). In 2021 a new national Centre for Sustainable Delivery was established to bring together national programmes for scheduled and unscheduled care, waiting times and best practice – and ensure health boards are implementing them.
Health boards There are 14 health boards (HBs) which are the upper tier of the Scottish health care system, reporting directly to the Scottish Government. They were created in 1974 as a result of the
National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1972 and are based on groups of the local government districts that existed between 1975 and 1996.
Elections to health boards In January 2008, the
Scottish Government announced plans for legislation to bring in direct elections as a way to select people for non-executive positions on health boards. The Health Committee of the Scottish Parliament had supported plans for directly elected members as a way that might improve public representation. This plan was abandoned in 2013 after trials in
Fife and
Dumfries and Galloway resulted in low
voter turnout.
Special health boards Local health boards are supported by six national special health boards providing national services, •
Scottish Ambulance Service (The single public emergency ambulance service in Scotland) • The
Golden Jubilee University National Hospital is a special NHS Board in Scotland with the purpose of reducing waiting times using a single modern hospital located at Clydebank. It was previously a private sector hospital built at a cost of £180 million, but was bought in 2002 by the Scottish Executive for £37.5 million after it failed to produce a profit despite being established with the help of a subsidy provided by a previous government. • The
State Hospitals Board for Scotland is responsible for the secure psychiatric hospital at Carstairs, which provides high security services for mentally disordered offenders and others who pose a high risk to themselves or others. •
NHS 24 runs a telephone advice and triage service that cover the out of hours period, more recently also providing a national telehealth service. •
Public Services Delivery Scotland The amalgamation of
NHS Education for Scotland and
NHS National Services Scotland under the Common Services Agency (CSA) to provide education, training and other common services for NHS Scotland boards. The six boards are supported by
Public Health Scotland, which is responsible for public health, including national health protection, and health education from April 2020)
NHS Health Scotland,
Health Protection Scotland and
Information Services Division were succeeded by
Public Health Scotland in April 2020. This new agency is a collaborative approach by both the
Scottish Government and
COSLA as a result of the Public Health Reform Programme.
NHS Education for Scotland and
NHS National Services Scotland were succeeded by
Public Services Delivery Scotland on 1 April 2026 in an effort to "reduce duplication, scale what works, giving frontline teams more time with patients".
Links with the NHS in England The NHS in Scotland does have some services provided by the NHS in England – such as
NHS Business Services Authority, which processes the payment of dental, optical and pharmacy vouchers and negotiates with pharmaceutical suppliers to negotiate prices per-item down. The costs for the medicines consumed is borne by the health board that patient's GP surgery is based in. Some very complex, low volume, highly-specialist hospital services are also provided by NHS trusts in England, such as the
Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London. These trusts also treat patients from healthcare systems outside the UK.
Representative bodies The
Mental Welfare Commission for Scotland is an independent statutory body which protects people with a psychological disorder who are not able to look after their own interests. It is funded through the Scottish Government Health & Social Care Directorate, and follows the same financial framework as the NHS in Scotland. The
Scottish Health Council took over from local Health Councils on 31 March 2005.
Quality of healthcare Regulation of most medical practitioners is a reserved matter, with doctors regulated by the
General Medical Council of the United Kingdom, nurses by the
Nursing and Midwifery Council, dentists, dental therapists, dental hygienists, dental technicians and dental nurses by the
General Dental Council, optometrists by the
General Optical Council, pharmacists by the
General Pharmaceutical Council, and
allied health professionals by the
Health and Care Professions Council. Inspection of premises is undertaken by
Healthcare Environment Inspectorate and the
Care Inspectorate. There are separate institutions, independent of government such as
Academy of Medical Royal Colleges and Faculties in Scotland, the
Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, the
Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, and the
Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow which are distinct from their counterparts elsewhere in the United Kingdom which support professionals in Scotland.
Other divisions Other subdivisions of the Scottish NHS include: •
Health Protection Scotland (Part of
NHS National Services Scotland responsible for health protection until April 2020 •
Public Health Scotland, responsible for public health protection in Scotland since April 2020 •
Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service Test and Protect During the
COVID-19 pandemic, NHS Scotland established Test and Protect as the national contact tracing service to minimise the spread of the virus within Scotland. ==Central Register==