Millennium Post

1,500 junior doctors’ job offers in UK withdrawn after blunder

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LONDON: In a major goofup, up to 1,500 junior doctors in the UK who were offered posts as registrars have had their job offers withdrawn, with authoritie­s blaming human error for the mistake that has left many emotionall­y and financiall­y stressed.

Last week, the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) discovered a significan­t number of candidates were credited with the wrong score, because of an error transferri­ng data from one computer programme to another - and may therefore have received an incorrect job offer.

The RCP, which oversaw the recruitmen­t, has apologised, blaming human error. It said the process would have to be re-run, the BBC reported.

In a statement, the British Medical Associatio­n said it was "appalled". "We cannot express how unacceptab­le we find this situation," adding: "This has caused extreme anxiety for trainees."

The junior doctors were alerted to the error on Friday. Fellow doctors described juniors as being in tears.

Many were set to uproot their families to take up the job offers, selling homes, putting offers down on houses, moving children to new schools and partners resigning from jobs to find new ones, the report said.

ST3 Recruitmen­t is a nationally co-ordinated system for recruiting doctors across England, Scotland and Wales into a broad range of specialiti­es.

Last month, after attending interviews, up to 1,500 junior doctors received job offers in 24 different medical fields.

Each candidate was given a score which determined how likely they were to get their choice of hospital and specialty.

On Friday, the RCP wrote to all those who had offers, advising them that the offer was being rescinded.

"We are deeply sorry that it has been necessary to rerun the ST3 offer process due to a mistake in this round of processing," states the letter from the RCP. "We have taken this approach to be fair to all candidates which can only be achieved with the real scores used."

Speaking on behalf of the junior doctors, the BMA issued a statement, lamenting "the impact - both emotionall­y and financiall­y - it is having on junior doctors across the UK".

Chairs Chaand Nagpaul and Jeeves Wijesuriya said they had spoken at length with Professor Jane Dacre, president of the RCP, "to articulate the strength of feeling".

"We have heard from train- ees who have, after receiving these job offers, put down deposits on homes, arranged moves or whose families had adjusted their plans," they said.

"We have conveyed our expectatio­n that college will support and compensate these trainees for any inconvenie­nce."

Liver doctor Ben Hudson said juniors were "in tears" while the RCP was "carelessly playing with people's futures".

The statement added that the BMA would be taking legal advice regarding possible breach of contract, and compensati­on.

The RCP said the error was discovered on Thursday and the college had worked as quickly as they could to identify the nature and extent of the problem.

The offer process is scheduled to begin again on May 14, the report said. COLOMBO: Sri Lanka's communist party JVP on Sunday said it would move the twentieth amendment to the Constituti­on seeking abolition of the all-powerful executive presidenti­al system of governance.

"We will soon start talking to Tamil and Muslim minority parties to get their support," JVP senior member Vijitha Herath said. The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) is to move a private member's bill in parliament to abolish the presidency. The primary intention of the 20th amendment is to abolish the Executive Presidency. "We all know that there were pledges to abolish the presidency by all presidents who were elected. We believe it can be done," Herath said.

Some sections of the powerful Buddhist clergy and Sinhala majority nationalis­t political parties have expressed strong opposition to the move and accused the JVP of a conspiracy.

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