The SNP is on course to fail yet another promise made to Scottish voters as unions warned the pledge to recruit 800 more GPs by 2027 is “at best a distant prospect”. It comes amid repeated warnings over the crisis in primary care.

On Tuesday, the NHS published its annual GP workforce statistics, showing a decrease of 40 family doctors between 2022 and 2023, from 4,514 to 4,474. This figure has remained steady over the past 10 years.

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However, the ‘whole-time equivalent’ figures – which take into account the number of GPs who have gone part-time – show a startling decline. They have plummeted by 197 since 2013 – despite the number of registered patients in Scotland soaring by over 390,000 in the same time.

Health Secretary Michael Matheson, left,  said the SNP administration remained fully committed to the 2027 target. And he claimed the “head count of GPs is now sitting consistently at over 5,000” – although that includes specialist trainees who are excluded from the NHS figures.