Daily Mail

NHS can target more overseas staff to fill gaps

- By Shaun Wooller Health Correspond­ent

THE NHS and care homes will be allowed to poach more workers from abroad in a bid stop staffing shortages going past the million mark.

The government says recruiters can ‘actively’ target 105 countries that were previously blackliste­d on ethical grounds.

It means just 47 nations are now offlimits to health and social care organisati­ons and private headhunter­s.

Countries are excluded if they have their own major shortages of doctors, nurses and midwives and a lack of access to healthcare.

The NHS is already short of 115,000 employees. That figure is expected to double over the next five years and exceed 475,000 by 2033, analysis by the Health Foundation suggests.

But this will only keep pace with cur

‘The outlook is deeply concerning’

rent healthcare standards, and improvemen­ts will likely mean 639,000 more workers are needed by that date, the think-tank added.

Social care is also likely to face a staffing deficit of 458,000 by 2033, its written evidence to the Commons health and social care committee says. The document warns: ‘While the NHS is experienci­ng significan­t staffing pressures, workforce shortages in adult social care, which employs around 1.5 million people in 1.65 million jobs in england, are even greater and the outlook is deeply concerning.’

Foreign nationals play a vital role within the NHS, with 16 per cent of nurses and 36 per cent of doctors in england trained outside of the Uk. Some 16 per cent of all social care workers are from overseas.

The general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, Dame Donna kinnair, said: ‘Nursing staff are exhausted and morale is on the floor – too many are telling me they fear an exodus of their colleagues once the pandemic pressure truly abates.’

The Department of Health said the new hiring policy ‘aligns with the principles’ set out by the World Health Organisati­on.

The Uk code says foreign recruitmen­t benefits both nations if workers come to the Uk to learn skills before returning home. Ministers hope the change will help them meet their manifesto promise of increasing nursing numbers by 50,000 by 2024.

Care minister Helen Whately said: ‘We will work with countries all over the world to promote the best standards of ethical recruitmen­t of health and social care staff.’

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