foxie48
It is an unacceptably high rate of attrition, especially as they will have a minimum of 7/8 years of expensive training. There is already a huge shortage of cardiac consultants and waiting lists in every area are extremely long. There is currently a shortage of 1,400 anaesthetists with 25% intending to retire within the next five years, this will not only have a huge effect on waiting lists for operations etc but also on the ability of the NHS to train more anaesthetists as it is one of the most closely supervised medical specialisms.
Yes, foxie48, of course, but other specialties are very over subscribed, and there are doctors unable to get on training schemes every year too. The roles that the doctors who leave training schemes go into also need doctors too of course. Anaesthetics is a specialty that has always struggled to recruit for example. I don’t know what the answer is other than trying more doctors, and tempting UK doctors working abroad to return, but in addition tot all those issues I think there’s a real, and relatively recent (ie within the last 20 years) problem with general practice, it just doesn’t attract the number of recruits it used to.