Saturday 27 June 2026
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NHS walk-in clinic closed for third successive Saturday

The Grantfield walk-in clinic pilot was opened at the end of April. Left to right: Associate medical director for primary care Dr Deepa Shah, Antony McDavitt, director of pharmacy and interim depute chief officer for the Shetland Health and Social Care Partnership, and NHS Shetland chief executive Brian Chittick at the walk-in clinic at Grantfield. Photo: NHS Shetland

THE NEW walk-in clinic at Grantfield will be closed for a third successive Saturday today because of “short-term staffing pressures”.

NHS Shetland said the service would re-open on Sunday from 9am to 5pm, with the lost slot at 4.30pm.

It is the third successive Saturday in which the clinic has been closed.

Concerns have been raised about the facility and staffing it since it was first confirmed earlier this year by first minister John Swinney on a visit to Shetland.

The clinic was opened as part of a 12 month Scottish Government pilot, with just under £1 million of government funding.

Swinney said in February he was confident from discussions with health board managers that it would be fully staffed.

Walk-in clinic a ‘really good opportunity’ to improve healthcare, NHS Shetland says

NHS Shetland’s pharmacy director and interim depute chief officer Tony McDavitt also said then he was confident NHS Shetland would be able to fully staff the walk-in clinic, adding the GP Joy programme would likely be used to provide additional GPs in the area.

However last month a meeting of Shetland’s integrated joint board (IJB) heard from McDavitt about the staffing pressures, which he said were affecting services across the health board.

“Staff availability was recognised from the outset as a challenge for the walk-in clinic pilot,” he said.

“The team is continuing to work to improve staffing generally for services and reduce the likelihood of further changes across services.

“The walk-in clinic remains a pilot. We will continue to review staffing, demand, patient and staff feedback, and the clinic’s effectiveness within wider primary care services.”

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