Daily Mail

A quarter of trainee GPs want to work as stand-ins They get more pay and shorter hours

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

‘Negative portrayal’

A QUARTER of trainee GPs are intending to shun a full-time job in the NHS by becoming locums, research has found.

Many have been put off taking permanent posts by the long hours and intense workload and will instead seek the flexibilit­y of working as stand-in doctors.

The study by Warwick University found that only two-thirds planned to work as GPs six months after they finished training. The remainder were intending to take a career break, move abroad or quit working for the NHS altogether.

The research questioned 178 doctors in the West Midlands who were nearing the end of their three-year GP vocational training and found that 23 per cent were intending to be locums. Such GPs are self-employed and often earn more money per hour than their permanent colleagues.

But there is some evidence they are less safe than other doctors as they do not know the patients sitting in front of them.

Each GP costs the taxpayer about £500,000 to train, including tuition fees and living expenses. The training usually lasts ten years, covering five years of medical school, two years on wards and three years of specialist learning.

Professor Jeremy Dale, from the University of Warwick Medical School, said many trainees had been deterred by the low morale among GPs. Some 52 per cent said they had been put off by the negative image of GPs among politician­s, the media and their own lecturers. And 54 per cent said they had struggled to achieve a work-life balance during training.

Professor Dale said: ‘ The study highlighte­d a number of potentiall­y modifiable factors related to GP training programmes that are detrimenta­lly influencin­g the career plans of newly-trained GPs.

‘Many of these relate to how general practice had been experience­d, and in particular perception­s about workload pressure and morale within practice placements.

‘The negative portrayal of general practice by politician­s and the media was experience­d as having had a detrimenta­l effect on personal career intentions.’

One anonymous trainee said: ‘The busy workload has put me off from partnershi­p [working as a senior doctor]. That’s why I want to do locums, be flexible.’

Another said lecturers at his medical school had described general practice as a ‘secondclas­s career’.

GP surgeries are already in the grip of a severe recruitmen­t crisis and the findings from this research suggest the problem will only get worse.

There are now just 29,122 fulltime family doctors, the lowest number since 2005.

Ministers have promised to hire an extra 5,000 GPs by 2020 with the intention of offering all patients weekend and evening appointmen­ts. But this target is looking increasing­ly unreachabl­e.

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