The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Brexit puts European Union lifeblood of British hospitals at risk

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LONDON: With British hospitals already struggling to fill their ranks, Brexit could make life even harder for the National Health Service as EU doctors and nurses either stay away or prepare to leave.

The state-run NHS is hugely reliant on EU immigrants to look after ageing Britons, and the latest data after the Brexit vote has put the sector on high alert.

“We risk facing a serious staff shortage which will only further worsen pressures on our NHS,” Charlie Massey, head of the General Medical Council (GMC), told a parliament­ary committee last month.

Some 60,000 EU nationals work in the NHS, representi­ng about five per cent of its staff of 1.2 million.

A survey commission­ed by Channel 4, published on Mar 13, showed that 42 per cent of them were considerin­g leaving in the next five years, and that 70 per cent considered Britain a less appealing place to work in the wake of the referendum.

The number of EU nurses registerin­g to work in the NHS has already plunged by 90 per cent since Britain voted to leave the European Union in June, according to figures from the Nursing and Midwifery Council.

Only 101 nurses signed up in December, compared with 1,304 in July, in what Jackie Smith, the council’s chief executive, called “the first sign of a change” after the referendum.

Janet Davies, director of the Royal College of Nursing, the main associatio­n of British nurses, told AFP that the national healthcare system already had 24,000 nursing vacancies and that it “simply could not cope without the contributi­on from EU nurses”.

British Prime Minister Theresa May has so far refused to grant residency rights to the estimated three million EU citizens living in Britain, saying that this should depend on an agreement on the status of about 1.2 million British nationals in other parts of the union.

“We want guarantees soon,” said Joan Pons, a 41-year-old Spanish nurse working in Gorleston, Norfolk, who has been living in Britain for 17 years.

In Spain, “all the nurses wanted to come here but they are now looking at other countries like France”.

Pons is a campaigner in The3Millio­n movement, an advocacy group set up following the referendum that wants residency rights for EU citizens.

He said the government’s silence on the issue had helped foster a climate of xenophobia.

“I get called all sorts of things on social networks. The other day a Polish nurse told me in tears that a young patient refused to be treated by her because she was foreign,” he said.

The government has vowed a policy of zero tolerance on hate crime incidents, which increased sharply just before and in the immediate aftermath of the referendum.

Pons has three children aged five, 11 and 14 who were all born in Britain, and they are now worried about whether they will need to move to Spain.

“They are scared that we’ll go on holiday and never come back,” he said.

Pons said that if European nurses leave Britain, and British pensioners now living in Spain return home, “the health system will collapse”. It would certainly add to the healthcare bill.

Paul MacNaught, director of EU, Internatio­nal and Prevention Programmes at the UK health ministry, has estimated that the presence of 190,000 British pensioners in other EU countries saves the British health system about £350 million (RM1.9 billion) per year.

The uncertaint­y has already proved too much for some EU healthcare profession­als.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Union flags fly above and in front of Britain’s Houses of Parliament as pedestrian­s walk across a busy road in central London. Britain will trigger its exit from the European Union on Mar 29.
— AFP photo Union flags fly above and in front of Britain’s Houses of Parliament as pedestrian­s walk across a busy road in central London. Britain will trigger its exit from the European Union on Mar 29.

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