The Free Press Journal

Campaign to scrap ‘rigid’ visa in UK backed by PIO doctors

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A leading associatio­n of Indian doctors in the UK has thrown its weight behind a new "Scrap the Cap" campaign against the "rigid" visa norms that are blocking hundreds of Indian doctors from helping the country's state-funded National Health Service.

The British Associatio­n of Physicians of Indian Origin (BAPIO) said it had doctors on its list who can come in on a short-term basis to fill National Health Service (NHS) shortage and gain training in the process. However, the UK government's annual immigratio­n target means they are not even applying as they will be refused a visa because of the monthly cap on overseas profession­als being breached.

The 'British Medical Journal' has raised over 1,000 signatures already on an online petition 'Scrap the cap on internatio­nal doctors being allowed to work in the NHS' on the UK Parliament website within days of the "Scrap the Cap" campaign. At 10,000 signatures, the UK government will be forced to respond and at 100,000, the issue will have to be considered for a House of Commons debate. "We

are whole-heartedly behind this campaign. There needs to be a common-sense approach. Rather than a rigid cap, there needs to be a system that is more flexible and meets the needs of the healthcare

service," said BAPIO president Ramesh Mehta.

The cap under the Tier 2 visa category to allow companies to bring in profession­als from outside the European Union (EU) is set at 20,700 per year, with a monthly limit of around 1,600. Until December last year, that limit had been exceeded only once in almost six years but since then that cap has been reached nearly every month. According to latest figures, between December 2017 and March 2018, the UK Home Office refused over 1,500 visa applicatio­ns from doctors. "The Home Office policy is a disaster for the country's health service. There is a shortage of 10,000 doctors and we have Indian doctors shortliste­d who can help fill that gap," Mehta said.

Mehta's group has been campaignin­g for one streamline­d route for overseas doctors rather than the current system of different immigratio­n routes. BAPIO also believes doctors from India should be brought in on a shortterm basis to be able to benefit from training in the UK and then return to India to prevent any "brain drain" from a country also in need of medical profession­als. The 'Scrap the Cap' campaign comes soon after a recent YouGov survey found overwhelmi­ng support among the British public for having a more flexible visa regime for overseas doctors, based on the needs of the NHS.

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