The Scotsman

NHS crisis ‘can’t be blamed on Covid’

- Rachel Amery Political Reporter

The General Medical Council published a report yesterday in which almost one in three doctors surveyed said they were likely to move abroad to work

A Scottish doctor who left the NHS to work in Australia says blaming the coronaviru­s pandemic for the NHS crisis is “spin”.

Dr Michael Mrozinski, who had worked as a locum accident-and-emergency consultant and is from Glasgow, left the NHS in 2016 to practise medicine in Australia. He said the Scottish and UK government­s could not use the pandemic as an excuse for failings in the health service.

His comments come after the General Medical Council (GMC) published a report yesterday in which almost one in three doctors surveyed said they were likely to move abroad to work in the next 12 months. Dr Mrozinski was asked during a BBC Scotland interview for his thoughts on government ministers saying the pandemic was to blame for the issues facing the NHS.

He said: “Honestly, I think it’s just spin from the government. I left in 2016 and I could see the writing on the wall from 2014 that things weren’t going in the right direction.

“Covid probably finished it off, but you can’t use it as an excuse. The government knew this was coming.

“In Australia, Covid was hard for a couple of years, but we have a good workforce and a looked-after workforce, and we are now completely back to normal. I would be careful with people saying ‘aye, we’ve been through a pandemic, it’s hard and it’s taken its toll’, because this workforce issue has been going on for a long while. The government is quite happy to have something they can blame it on. But I don’t think it should be used as an excuse – this has been coming for a long time.”

A GMC survey stated that almost one in three doctors had said they were ‘very likely’ or ‘fairly likely’ to move abroad to work in the next 12 months. The Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh said this needed to be a “wake-up call” for both the Scottish and UK government­s.

More than 13 per cent of those practising in the UK who were surveyed said they were “very likely” and a further 17 per cent said they were “fairly likely” to leave the NHS to work elsewhere in the survey. More than 75 per cent of doctors also reported feeling under-valued profession­ally.

British Medical Associatio­n representa­tive body chair and workforce lead Dr Latifa Patel said: “When we’re already short of doctors, these figures are incredibly worrying, showing almost a third of doctors surveyed saying they are likely to move to work abroad in the next 12 months. If the intentions laid out in this survey are followed through across the workforce this year, losing such a significan­t proportion of the UK’S medical expertise would be disastrous for patients.

“That so many doctors say they are looking to leave for overseas is not surprising though, when we consider the immense pressures healthcare staff are under in an overwhelme­d service."

Dr Patel added: “There is much more employers and policymake­rs can do to support doctors.”

The government is quite happy to have something they can blame it on

Dr Michael Mrozinski

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