Jeremy Hunt promises to end NHS reliance on overseas doctors after Brexit
Jeremy Hunt is to pledge that the NHS in England will be “self sufficient” regarding doctor numbers after Britain leaves the European Union, as he sets out a package of measures aimed at reducing its reliance on foreign-trained medics.
The health secretary will use his speech to the Conservative party conference on Tuesday to promise that medical schools in the UK will be allowed to offer up to 1,500 extra training places every year, and released figures that said that one in four NHS doctors have been trained abroad.
Hunt will stress that foreign-trained doctors do a “fantastic job”, and say that “we want EU nationals who are already here to be able to stay post-Brexit” – but he will also ask: “Is it right to import doctors from poorer countries that need them while turning away bright home graduates desperate to study medicine?”
He wants NHS England to reach the target in 2025. “Of course it will take a number of years before those doctors qualify, but by the end of the next parliament we will make the NHS self- sufficient in doctors,” Hunt is to add.
Remain campaigners warned in the run-up to the referendum that the NHS, which relies heavily on foreign staff, would be hit if EU workers could no longer travel freely to work in the UK. Data from the General Medical Council records that 30,472 doctors come from the EU and other countries in the European Economic Area, while 71,139 were trained elsewhere in the world outside the UK.
Hunt hopes that by boosting the number of places now, he will have a pipeline of British-trained doctors ready in time. There is rapidly accumulating evidence that doctor shortages are causing serious problems, including the part-closure of A&E units at hospitals in Chorley, Lancashire and Grantham in Lincolnshire.
The move represents a partial U-turn by Hunt, as until now he has repeatedly responded to evidence of understaffing by pointing out that the NHS in England has more doctors now than when the coalition took office in 2010. Currently half of those people applying for medical school are rejected, because of the limits on the number of places.
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