Daily Mail

More than 40% of doctors were trained abroad in parts of UK

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

MORE than 40 per cent of doctors in some areas of England trained abroad, a report shows.

The General Medical Council said the medical profession had hit ‘ crunch point’ with demand for doctors far outstrippi­ng supply.

As a result the UK is becoming increasing­ly reliant on foreign-trained doctors, particular­ly from Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy.

Some 43 per cent of hospital doctors and GPs in East Anglia qualified overseas, and the proportion is 41 per cent in the West Midlands.

This falls to 38 per cent in the East Midlands, 36 per cent in London and 18 per cent in the South West. The national average is around 34 per cent.

The GMC’s report says the number of new doctors – either from the UK or abroad – rose by just 2 per cent between 2012 and 2016. Over the same period there was a 27 per cent increase in the number of patients arriving in A&E.

The report also highlights how increasing numbers of junior doctors are taking a career break midway through training. Some feel ‘burnt out’ or want a better worklife balance while others go abroad to get experience of working in other countries.

Figures show that 54 per cent of junior doctors took a break after their two years of foundation training in 2016, up from 30 per cent in 2012.

This means there are fewer doctors progressin­g up through the ranks – and some of those who take a break never come back.

Charlie Massey, chief executive of the GMC, said: ‘We have reached a crucial moment – a crunch point – in the developmen­t of the UK’s medical workforce. The decisions that we make over the next five years will determine whether it can meet these extra demands.

‘Each country (in the UK) needs to think carefully about how many doctors are needed, what expertise we need them to have so they can work as flexibly as possible, and where they should be located given the changes and movement

‘Underlying challenge’

in population expected. We are a profession­al regulator, not a workforce planning body, but we want to be an active partner in helping each country of the UK to address these priorities.

‘The underlying challenge for all in healthcare is how we retain the good doctors we have right now. Everything we hear from the profession tells us that we need to value them more; nurture cultures that are safe and supportive, and do what we can to help staff achieve the right balance between their profession­al and personal lives through more flexible working arrangemen­ts.’

The proportion of foreign-trained doctors has risen slightly compared to last year from 33.8 per cent to 34.1 per cent. Almost three quarters are from outside Europe. Recently, however, increasing numbers of doctors have arrived from EU states which have been hit by economic recession.

The most common countries of origin have historical­ly been India, Pakistan and South Africa but they are increasing­ly arriving from Spain, Portugal, Greece and Italy.

The GMC is particular­ly worried that doctors across the board are becoming ‘over-burdened’ and working at levels which are ‘ not sustainabl­e’. This is affecting the ‘quality and safety of care’ and putting patients at risk, it adds.

Furthermor­e, the high pressured working environmen­t may be deterring promising graduates from choosing a career as a doctor. The report says doctors should be given more support to make their working lives easier.

Professor Jane Dacre, president of the Royal College of Physicians, said: ‘ We share the report’s concern about the low numbers of doctors in some specialtie­s.

‘The fact that our population is ageing rapidly, with individual­s often having many complex diseases, there needs to be incentives to encourage many more of our physicians into these specialtie­s.’

THE fact that nearly half of doctors in some parts of Britain were trained abroad is a devastatin­g indictment of our medical establishm­ent – from profession­al bodies and NHS managers to politician­s.

Of course the vast majority of foreign doctors do an outstandin­g job, but aren’t they needed in their own countries? And why on earth, with so many young British people desperate to study medicine, can’t we train enough doctors of our own?

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