I very much doubt that my attitude, or my posts on Gransnet are responsible for people emigrating
. Of course I wouldn't berate a doctor for anything. As I've said, I use the NHS, so other than personal friends, doctors I see are in that system, and by definition are not working abroad. Also, I am neither rude nor confrontational in company, so even if I met a private doctor home for a holiday the situation just wouldn't arise.
I understand people being defensive about their children. As I have said, I am a mother too, and would react to someone making comments that I thought were about my children. My comments are not personal, however. They were in response to a thread asking why we are paying an extra *£12billion a year in National Insurance, and I simply responded to that with a suggestion.
Whenever anyone dares to criticise waiting lists, their inability to get to see a GP or anything to do with the NHS people jump on them indignantly with tales of their children's exemplary academic ability and how they have given their all to the system. Again, I understand pride in one's children, but I do wonder whether parents of medics are so used to being lauded for their superior offspring that any criticism of any part of the system is taken as a personal slight.
I repeat. I am showing no disrespect to doctors at all, never mind the offspring of posters on here. I fully understand the way their training works, and know that they work long and unsociable hours.
I also know that many other people work long and unsociable hours, take a long time to qualify, and are paid a lot less. Pay isn't the issue for me though - it is the fact that medical students cost the NHS a lot of money, and don't always stay in the system when they have qualified.
I've mentioned the armed forces as an example of people having their education subsidised in return for a promise to serve a minimum term on graduation or pay back the fees. It's a simple return on investment. In the private sector it is not unusual for employers to pay for training courses on the same basis - they are investing in the future of their company by ensuring that their staff are well qualified, but not acting out of charity - if the staff then take their expertise to a rival within a predetermined period they have to pay back the money.
What I am suggesting is that doctors and other NHS professionals should get their training free, which would encourage able students from all backgrounds to join, and would swell the numbers of staff in the NHS, which is something that everyone seems to agree needs to happen as a matter of urgency. By 'free' I mean just that - not just the majority of the fees that sit above their £9k pa contribution. I believe that student midwives get a bursary, for instance? If so, that's the sort of thing I mean. The payback would be that graduates have to pay back the fees, bringing them in line with students from other disciplines, unless they work for the NHS for a pre-defined period, which would be made clear to them before they apply.
Thinking about it, as long as we have fees, and as long as university places are competitive, a lot of people are unable to access higher education. As we are always being told that few people pay back their loans why not scrap fees, but make it a condition that graduates pay NI for a minimum period before qualifying for benefits or free pension contributions? I know several people who graduated when education was free, only to 'retire' from the workplace on marriage or pregnancy, having taken a place that could have gone to someone who would have contributed in their turn. That also seems to me unfair.
Whilst I don't see education as being to 'fit people to jobs', I do think that it is a privilege, and if discouraging those who never pay back their loans because they never work from taking places from those from all backgrounds who fully intend to work and pay into the system that supports us all, that would surely be a good thing?
In all cases, there would, of course, need to be safeguards to protect people who enter the system in good faith but are overtaken by events beyond their control.