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Overseas-trained doctors leaving the UK in record numbers

about 17 hours ago
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Record numbers of overseas-trained doctors are quitting the UK, leaving the NHS at risk of huge gaps in its workforce, with hostility towards migrants blamed for the exodus.In all, 4,880 doctors who qualified in another country left the UK during 2024 – a rise of 26% on the 3,869 who did so the year before – figures from the General Medical Council reveal.NHS leaders, senior doctors and the GMC warned that the increased denigration of and abuse directed at migrants in the UK was a significant reason for the rise in foreign medics leaving.“It’s really worrying that so many highly skilled and highly valued international doctors the NHS just can’t afford to lose are leaving in their droves,” said Daniel Elkeles, the chief executive of the hospitals group NHS Providers.“We wouldn’t have an NHS if we hadn’t for many years recruited talented and valued people from all around the world.

The diversity of the NHS workforce is one of its biggest strengths.”Dr Amit Kochhar, chair of the British Medical Association’s representative body, said: “Doctors who trained abroad have long made up a significant sector of the NHS workforce, and medical care in the UK would have long since withered away without them.“But as we warned last month along with other trade unions, a sustained campaign of anti-migrant rhetoric is leaving many doctors with a migrant background considering if it is worth staying.”Wes Streeting, the health secretary, voiced alarm this month that NHS staff were bearing the brunt of a return to 1970s and 1980s-style racism in Britain where it is “socially acceptable to be racist”.The rise in overseas doctors quitting coincided with a levelling-off in the number coming to work in Britain, the medical regulator’s annual report on the state of medical education and practice in the UK for 2024 showed.

The 20,060 who joined the UK medical register last year were only a few more than the 19,629 who did so in 2023 and formed the smallest increase since 2020.The GMC’s findings have raised concern because the NHS is so heavily reliant on doctors from elsewhere – 42% of its entire medical workforce qualified overseas.Doctors are a “mobile workforce” with skills that are in demand around the world, said Charlie Massey, the GMC’s chief executive.“Internationally qualified doctors who have historically chosen to work in the UK could quite conceivably choose to leave if they feel they have no future job progression here, or if the country feels less welcoming,” he said.“Any hardening of rhetoric and falling away of support could undermine the UK’s image as somewhere the brightest and the best from all over the would want to work.

”The Royal College of Nursing last month highlighted a big recent surge in nurses suffering racist abuse at work,The plateauing in foreign doctors coming to the UK may be because such medics are finding it harder to get a job, the GMC said,Only one in eight who became registered in the UK last year “connected to a designated body” – ie, got a post within the NHS – within six months, statistics showed,That was down on the one in five who did so in 2023 and one in four in 2022,The shortage in places available for early-career doctors to start training in their chosen medical specialism has prompted the government to allocate more of them to UK-trained medics.

But the GMC’s report warns ministers that that approach, allied to the difficulty of finding a job, may prove misguided by discouraging overseas doctors from relocating to the UK.“It is vital that workforce policies across all four [UK] countries do not inadvertently demoralise or drive out the talent on which our health services depend”, wrote Massey and the GMC chair, Prof Carrie MacEwen.
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Why don’t Conservatives get credit for culture funding? | Letter

Helen Marriage, a hugely respected cultural leader, writes that “there is no political party that will commit to the kind of investment needed to keep a living art and culture ecology alive” (Durham’s Lumiere festival was a beacon of hope and togetherness – we cannot let the lights go out on the rest of the arts, 11 November). But she also places the responsibility on all of us. She wants the culture sector to make a better case. But can it?As commissioner for culture in the last government, I remain surprised that large funding decisions directed at culture have been forgotten, devalued and ignored, perhaps because the sources were then from a Conservative government.During Covid, culture was the only economic sector to receive its own rapid, specially designed, comprehensive rescue package

3 days ago
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Jon Stewart on Trump’s Epstein files flip-flop: ‘This dude is flailing’

Late-night hosts tore into the next chapter of Donald Trump’s never-ending Jeffrey Epstein scandal.Jon Stewart ripped into Trump on Monday evening after the president abruptly changed tack and called on House Republicans to authorize the justice department’s release of files related to Epstein, a convicted sex offender – files which Trump himself could order to be released.“If he had nothing to hide, he could have declassified and released these files himself at any time,” the Daily Show host explained. “How do I know this? A legal expert named Donald Jurisprudence Trump said so.”Stewart then played footage of Trump from 2022 in which he insisted that the president can declassify anything, at any time, just by saying so or “even by thinking about it”

3 days ago
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Memoirs, myths and Midnight’s Children: Salman Rushdie’s 10 best books – ranked!

As the author publishes a new story collection, we rate the work that made his name – from his dazzling Booker winner to an account of the 2022 attack that nearly killed him “It makes me want to hide behind the furniture,” Rushdie now says of his debut. It’s a science fiction story, more or less, but also indicative of the sort of writer Rushdie would become: garrulous, playful, energetic. The tale of an immortal Indian who travels to a mysterious island, it’s messy but charming, and the sense of writing as performance is already here. (Rushdie’s first choice of career was acting, and he honed his skill in snappy lines when working in an advertising agency.) Not a great book, but one that shows a great writer finding his voice, and a fascinating beginning to a stellar career

4 days ago
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High art: the museum that is only accessible via an eight-hour hike

At 2,300 metres above sea level, Italy’s newest – and most remote – cultural outpost is visible long before it becomes reachable. A red shard on a ridge, it looks first like a warning sign, and then something more comforting: a shelter pitched into the wind.The structure stands on a high ridge in the municipality of Valbondione, along the Alta Via delle Orobie, exposed to avalanches and sudden weather shifts. I saw it from above, after taking off from the Rifugio Fratelli Longo, near the village of Carona – a small mountain municipality a little over an hour’s drive from GAMeC, Bergamo’s Galleria d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea – the closest access point I was given for the site visit.The Frattini Bivouac is not staffed, ticketed or mediated

4 days ago
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Colbert on Trump and Epstein: ‘They were best pals and underage girls was Epstein’s whole thing’

Late-night hosts covered this week’s latest bombshell Epstein and Trump revelations and spoke about the president’s latest interview with Laura Ingraham.On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert spoke about the government shutdown likely coming to an end after “an historic impasse” (the shutdown later did end) and Democrat Adelita Grijalva being sworn in as a member of Congress, seven weeks after she won a special House election in Arizona.Colbert said she has been “reborn from the ashes” and will be the 218th and final signature needed to force a vote to release the Jeffrey Epstein files.He joked that on her first day she was shown around and told “down there is the room where you’re going to topple the pervert cabal”.This week saw some new emails from Epstein released which suggest Trump knew of his conduct

8 days ago
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‘I really enjoyed it’: new RSC curriculum brings Shakespeare’s works to life in UK classrooms

Act 1. Scene 1. A classroom in a secondary school in Peterborough. It is a dreary, wet afternoon. Pupils file into the room, take their seats and face the front

9 days ago
trendingSee all
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French authorities investigate alleged Holocaust denial posts on Elon Musk’s Grok AI

1 day ago
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Keir Starmer defends trip to South Africa for G20 summit as budget looms

about 19 hours ago
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Why nonalcoholic spirits go from strength to strength

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Epstein files congressional vote: ‘Make no mistake – this isn’t over’

2 days ago
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‘We excel at every phase of AI’: Nvidia CEO quells Wall Street fears of AI bubble amid market selloff

1 day ago
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Jessie Diggins, trailblazing star of cross-country skiing, to retire at end of season

about 20 hours ago