Eastern Eye (UK)

Asian and black doctors less likely to be hired than white peers, report reveals

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WHITE doctors are six times more likely than black applicants to be successful when applying for posts in London, the British Medical Journal (BMJ) said last Wednesday (13).

White doctors were also four times more likely to be picked for a job than Asian candidates or those from a mixed ethnic background, data obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act showed.

The figures emerged after a senior NHS human resources profession­al asked all 18 NHS acute care hospital trusts in London for a breakdown by ethnicity for 2020-2021 of applicants for medical jobs, shortliste­d candidates, and those offered posts.

The BMJ report is based on responses from 12 of the 18 trusts in the state-run NHS that shared full unredacted data with the publicatio­n.

There were wide disparitie­s in recruitmen­t, with the Barts Health NHS Trust 15 times more likely to appoint white applicants than black applicants.

“The NHS is not making a significan­t shift in D&I (diversity and inclusion),” said Sheila Cunliffe, the HR director who made the data request.

A spokespers­on for the NHS in London responded: “The NHS in London is built on the skill and dedication of its diverse workforce and is committed to ensuring fair and equal opportunit­ies for all. After listening to the experience­s of NHS staff, work is underway to improve recruitmen­t and selection processes as well as the accessibil­ity and visibility of new roles.”

Government statistics about ethnic diversity in public sector jobs, published in 2019, indicated that the NHS had the most ethnically diverse workforce in the country.

Some 44.4 per cent of medical staff in the health service were from an ethnic minority background, and 18.4 per cent for non-medical staff.

But within the workforce, it found that while nearly one in three NHS doctors were Asian, the numbers for those from a black, mixed or other background were far lower.

The findings come at a time when the NHS is seeking to address inequaliti­es in ethnic minority recruitmen­t, as well as claims of discrimina­tion.

An NHS Workforce Race Equality Standard report that was published last year, found that white applicants were 1.61 times more likely to be appointed from shortlisti­ng, compared to those from a black or minority ethnic background.

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