Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale has urged the First Minister to stop health board proposals for cuts to local NHS services.

Speaking at First Minister's Questions on Thursday, Dugdale called on Nicola Sturgeon to "respect the will of this parliament" and ensure the proposed changes are subject to ministerial decision.

It comes after opposition parties united to win a Holyrood vote on Wednesday demanding health secretary Shona Robison "call-in" the health board proposals for review.

Labour says maternity services at the Vale of Leven Hospital in Alexandria and Inverclyde Hospital in Greenock, paediatric services at the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Paisley and trauma orthopaedics at Monklands Hospital in Airdrie are all at risk.

The First Minister responded that the proposals were in the "early stages" of a "well-established and long-standing process".

During this process, she added, would be a decision on whether or not the proposed changes are considered "major", at which point they will be subject to public consultation and ministerial approval.

Labour say that prior to the Scottish Parliament election this year, SNP candidates in the areas affected, along with the First Minister, promised local hospital services would be protected.

Speaking in the chamber on Thursday, Dugdale said: "Last night this parliament, the representatives of the people of Scotland, spoke with one voice on the planned cuts to local NHS services. So will the First Minister now respect the will of this parliament?"

Sturgeon responded: "It's important firstly to emphasise that no decisions have been taken on any of these proposed service changes.

"It's also important to stress, as the health secretary did yesterday, that there is a well-established and long-standing process in place to consider proposals for service change.

"The early stages of that process, which Greater Glasgow and Clyde health board are currently engaged in, inform the judgement about whether or not a particular service change is to be considered major and therefore ultimately decided by ministers."

However, Dugdale said that while her party recognised the due process involved, she was "angry" at SNP candidates in the local areas affected who "promised people that these services would be safe when they were not".

She said: "The truth is, as a parliament, we agreed that the health secretary should call-in proposed cuts by health boards in Glasgow, Lanarkshire and the Lothians, and that's because these services are vital to communities across the country - but they are now at risk."

Dugdale urged the First Minister to "reject the planned cuts".

The First Minister criticised Dugdale for the "complete incoherence at the heart of Scottish Labour", arguing that if the Labour leader "recognises there is a due process," she should also recognise that "at a certain stage of that process, the decision about whether or not a service change is a major one is taken."

"When we reach that point, the health secretary will take that decision, she will take account the views of the Scottish Health Council and of course she will take account of the views of this parliament," Sturgeon added.

MSPs backed Labour's motion in Wednesday's debate demanding a call-in of the proposals by 64 votes to zero, with 62 abstentions from SNP MSPs.

The Scottish Government's amendment stressing its commitment to "maintaining and improving safe and effective local services across Scotland" was defeated.