Brexit has worsened shortage of NHS doctors,
analysis shows
Exclusive: More than 4,000 European medics have chosen
not to work in NHS since Britain left EU, data reveals
Denis
Campbell Health policy editor
Sun 27 Nov
2022 18.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/nov/27/brexit-worsened-shortage-nhs-doctors-eu
Brexit has
worsened the UK’s acute shortage of doctors in key areas of care and led to
more than 4,000 European doctors choosing not to work in the NHS, research
reveals.
The
disclosure comes as growing numbers of medics quit in disillusionment at their
relentlessly busy working lives in the increasingly overstretched health
service. Official figures show the NHS in England alone has vacancies for
10,582 physicians.
Britain has
4,285 fewer European doctors than if the rising numbers who were coming before
the Brexit vote in 2016 had been maintained since then, according to analysis
by the Nuffield Trust health thinktank which it has shared with the Guardian.
In 2021, a
total of 37,035 medics from the EU and European free trade area (EFTA) were
working in the UK. However, there would have been 41,320 – or 4,285 more – if
the decision to leave the EU had not triggered a “slowdown” in medical recruitment
from the EU and the EFTA quartet of Norway, Iceland, Switzerland and
Lichtenstein.
The dropoff
has left four major types of medical specialities that have longstanding doctor
shortages – anaesthetics, children, psychiatry, and heart and lung treatment –
failing to keep up with a demand for care heightened by Covid and an ageing
population.
Just one
example of how the slowdown is affecting day-to-day NHS care is the limit on
the amount of surgery that can take place, said the Nuffield Trust researcher
Martha McCarey, the lead author of the analysis. The UK has 394 fewer EU/EFTA
anaesthetists than if pre-Brexit numbers had continued, she found.
“The NHS
has struggled to recruit vital specialists such as anaesthetists at home, and
Brexit looks to be worsening longstanding workforce shortages in some
professional groups. Without anaesthetists, many operations cannot happen,” she
said.
The
findings come amid calls from business leaders for ministers to rethink how
immigration into Britain works to help overcome economy-wide labour shortages.
These have deepened in recent years, partly as a result of the UK ending
automatic free movement for EU nationals. The Confederation of British Industry
has been particularly vocal in that demand.
The
Nuffield Trust blamed the dropoff in doctors on the fact that EU-trained medics
seeking to work in the UK now face extra bureaucracy and higher costs as a
direct result of Brexit. “Since the referendum campaign, greater costs, more
paperwork and uncertainty over visas because of Brexit have been among the
biggest barriers to recruiting and keeping EU and EFTA doctors,” said McCarey.
The NHS has
369 fewer cardiothoracic surgeons, 288 fewer paediatricians and 165 fewer
psychiatrists if recruitment patterns seen before the 2016 vote had been
maintained.
Daisy
Cooper, the Liberal Democrat health spokesperson and deputy leader, said the
non-arrival of 4,285 EU/EFTA medics was “shocking”.
She added:
“From absurd pension rules to expensive visas, the Conservatives are strangling
our pipeline of NHS staff with red tape. The NHS is on its knees after years of
the Conservative government running the service into the ground.
“These
figures are shocking and yet more evidence if any was needed of the
Conservatives’ incompetence.”
Brexit has
had a far more damaging effect on the NHS’s ability to hire nurses from the EU.
While 9,389 nurses and midwives who had trained in the bloc came to work in
Britain in 2015-16, only 663 did so in 2021-22, data released by the Nursing
and Midwifery Council (NMC) in May showed. However, that dramatic drop has been
offset by a huge rise in the number of those professionals coming from the rest
of the world, notably India and the Philippines, the regulator said. A report
due this week from the NMC is expected to confirm the trends have continued in
recent months.
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The UK has
58,000 fewer nurses than if the numbers arriving pre-Brexit had continued.
“Nursing saw a far more dramatic collapse in EU and EFTA migration around the
time of the referendum, as mass recruitment ended and a new language test came
in,” the NMC analysis said. While there are 29,000, that would have been as
many as 87,000 if things had not changed in 2016, it estimated.
The British
Medical Association (BMA), the main doctors’ union, lamented the smaller than
expected number of European doctors deciding to work in the UK since Brexit.
“Whilst we
have such severe staffing shortages in the NHS, including nearly 11,000 medical
vacancies in English hospitals alone, it’s deeply disappointing that Brexit has
meant we’re losing out on more than 4,000 EU doctors who could be caring for
patients,” said Dr Kitty Mohan, the chair of the BMA’s international doctors
committee.
“Even with
efforts to increase domestic supply of doctors, given the length of time it
takes to train these specialists, we will still find ourselves short without
recruiting and retaining our EU and international colleagues.”
Research
published in March 2021 found Brexit had left many European doctors already in
the UK feeling unwelcome, alienated and insecure about their future working
lives in Britain.
The
decision to leave the EU had a “profound impact” on those medics. And it
produced “anger, worry and frustration, along with objective concerns about
legal status, qualifications, training and pensions contributing to the strong
impact of Brexit felt in their personal and professional lives”, the study by
academics at Brunel University and Queen Mary University of London found.
The
Department of Health and Social Care rejected the thinktank’s findings.
A
spokesperson said: “This analysis is inaccurate and we don’t recognise or agree
with its key conclusions. We are making significant progress in training and
recruiting a record number of nurses, doctors and healthcare professionals.
There are over 9,000 more nurses working in the NHS and there are over 26,000
more hospital doctors now than in 2016.”
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