• June 26, 2023

NHS to recruit UK staff and train them to be doctors, nurses, GPs and healthcare professsionals

LONDON June 26: The NHS will undergo a recruitment drive as part of the ‘largest expansion in training and workforce’ in its history, Rishi Sunak has announced.

The Prime Minister said the plan will ‘reduce our reliance’ on foreign staff, while also helping to tackle chronic NHS waiting lists.

The cap on medical school places is set to be doubled from 7,500 in England to 15,000, allowing a greater number of students to train as doctors.

The new package of measures could see apprentice-doctor roles brought in to fill NHS staffing gaps in England.

The proposal would see people who finish the five-year apprenticeships becoming junior doctors – offering an alternative to the traditional medical degree route.

The plan also aims to expand the nurse apprenticeship scheme that already exists.

The plan will be announced in full later this week.

But Mr Sunak told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg show: ‘This week we’re going to do something that no government has ever done.

‘It’s going to be one of the most significant announcements in the history of the NHS, and that is to make sure that it has a long-term workforce plan so that we can hire the doctors, nurses and GPs that we need, not just today, but for years into the future, to provide the care that we all need.’

He added: ‘What it will represent is the largest expansion in training and workforce in the NHS’s history.’ But he conceded the changes might take up to 15 years for patients to feel the benefits.

Mr Sunak has made tackling NHS waiting lists one of his five priorities. Yet the number of people in England waiting for routine operations has soared to a record high. Official figures show 7.33million people were left waiting for operations such as hip and knee replacements at the end of March this year – the highest total since NHS records began in August 2007.

Mr Sunak said the backlog was partly down to the coronavirus pandemic. He added: ‘The backlog that ensued was always going to take some time to work through.

‘Because of our record investment today, because of the plans that we’ve put in place, we are seeing that waiting lists are coming down for individual people.

‘I’ve always said the overall waiting list was not going to come down until next year.’

Mr Sunak, the son of a GP and a pharmacist, described the plan as the ‘cornerstone’ of his Government’s vision for ‘a better, more modern healthcare system’, adding: ‘I feel a great responsibility to ensure our NHS endures.’

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