Foreign
medics shunning NHS because of anti-migrant rhetoric, says top doctor
Exclusive:
UK an ‘unwelcoming, racist’ country for overseas health workers, according to
medical colleges leader
‘The NHS would collapse within hours’: BME
staff say Britain fails to appreciate their roles
Denis
Campbell Health policy editor
Fri 26
Dec 2025 20.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/dec/26/foreign-medics-shunning-nhs-anti-migrant-rhetoric
Foreign
doctors and nurses are increasingly shunning the NHS because anti-migrant
rhetoric and rising racism have created “a hostile environment”, the leader of
Britain’s medics has warned.
The
health service is being put at risk because overseas health professionals
increasingly see the UK as an “unwelcoming, racist” country, in part because of
the government’s tough approach to immigration, Jeanette Dickson said.
Record
numbers of foreign-born doctors are quitting the NHS and the post-Brexit surge
in those coming to work in it has stalled. At the same time, the number of
nurses and midwives joining the NHS has fallen sharply over the past year.
Dickson
is the chair of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, which represents the
professional interests of the UK and Ireland’s 220,000 doctors, including GPs,
surgeons, anaesthetists and A&E specialists.
She said
that without the contribution of foreign doctors and nurses the NHS “could
quite easily fall over” and find itself without “a critical mass of people
there to run the service safely”.
Foreign-born
doctors and nurses were being put off by antagonism by politicians towards
migrants, media coverage of immigration, the racist abuse of international
medical graduates by NHS colleagues and racist aggression by patients toward
minority ethnic NHS staff, she said.
“My
feeling is we are creating a culture where the rhetoric is ‘foreigner bad’. If
you have never visited Britain and are looking at our media, the social media,
press media, print media, what our politicians are reported as saying, I think
that it’s not unreasonable to see that as a hostile environment,” Dickson, an
NHS consultant clinical oncologist, told the Guardian.
“Because
[foreign health staff] see Britain retreating from Europe, ‘we can go it
alone’. They see attacks on synagogues, they see anti-Muslim protests. They see
the rhetoric that immigration is bad, [that] immigration is a major problem for
the country.
“Why
would you go somewhere where people are going, ‘we don’t need you, we don’t
want you’? For them that makes Britain appear unwelcoming, racist. The
prevalence of it [hostility to migrants] is significantly more [than] 10 years
ago.”
While the
NHS has relied on overseas staff since its creation in 1948, this dependence
has reached its greatest extent. For example, 42% of all UK doctors qualified
abroad, General Medical Council (GMC) figures show.
The
atmosphere in the UK towards migrants is now so unpleasant that some
foreign-born NHS staff feel unsafe in their everyday lives, Dickson added.
Selina
Douglas, the chief executive of the Whittington health trust in London, told a
public meeting last month that hospital and community-based staff were
experiencing a rise in racism.
Referring
to overseas nurses who have worked here for 25 years, Douglas said: “Those
staff are being racially abused in our hospital. I have had staff spat at
walking up the hill [from the tube station].”
In a
warning to abusive patients, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, said last
month that “your right to access free healthcare in this country does not come
with the freedom to abuse our staff on any grounds”. However, it is unclear
what action NHS trusts or the police take against abuse by patients.
Workforce
data collected by the GMC and the Nursing and Midwifery Council show that more
and more foreign medical and nursing graduates are “voting with their feet” by
either not coming to the UK or leaving to work elsewhere, Dickson said.
She
voiced her concerns at the end of a year in which Streeting has said NHS staff
are often the targets of an increasingly overt “1970s, 1980s-style racism” and
an NHS trust leader expressed alarm that Black and Asian staff visiting
patients’ homes had been “deliberately intimidated” by the placing of England
flags.
She
claimed that the Labour government was partly to blame for doctors deciding not
to come to Britain because it was prioritising UK medical graduates over those
who qualified overseas in the allocation of places in specialist medical
training. This is a key issue alongside pay in the resident doctors dispute in
England between ministers and the British Medical Association.
That may
prove shortsighted, Dickson suggested, given that there was a global shortage
of doctors, who can earn more money and enjoy easier working lives outside the
UK.
She
added: “You have a population who have retreated from internationalism through
Brexit. There is a secretary of state who is also saying ‘we would prioritise
UK graduates for jobs’.
“There’s
always been a cohort [of doctors] who’ve gone back to their country of origin
or another country. More worryingly to me [is] the number of overseas graduates
who wanted to enter the country is diminishing as well. And I think that’s
partly about the prioritisation argument that’s being pushed forward.
“Doctors
have a lot of portable skills, as do nurses. There’s an international shortage
[of both]. If the country is not looking as welcoming, or people don’t feel as
safe, and Canada, Australia and New Zealand are opening their doors more, then
I find it unsurprising that people are leaving.”
Anti-migrant
sentiment expressed by unnamed politicians could prompt so many overseas staff
to quit that the NHS “could quite easily fall over”, she warned.
“If we
have significant outward migration, and continue with the rhetoric nationally
that immigration is bad and also ‘we’re prioritising UK graduates’, then I do
worry about us coming to a point of not having a critical mass of people there
to run the service safely.”
She said
Keir Starmer, the prime minister, and Streeting should make clear to the public
that foreign-born frontline NHS doctors and nurses were welcome because “they
provide an invaluable service to patients but also to the NHS and their
colleagues, because without them we’d all be completely snowed under. The ones
who are already in the UK, we absolutely need to make them feel welcome and go
out of our way to make them feel welcome”.
Responding
to Dickson’s remarks, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social
Care said: “The NHS benefits hugely from its international staff, and we’ll
continue to support and attract talented overseas staff who want to dedicate
their time, energy and skills to the health service.
“Discrimination
against patients and staff alike undermines everything our health service
stands for – and the NHS has a zero tolerance for racism.”
They
added: “However, a failure to train enough medical professionals has left us
reliant on international recruitment to plug the gaps. It’s only right that
British taxpayers should see a return on the investment they make in training
homegrown medical talent which is why our 10-year health plan commits to
prioritising UK medical graduates and others who have worked in the NHS for
significant periods for speciality training roles.”

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