MaizieD
Casdon
GrannyGravy13
Whitewavemark2
GrannyGravy13
Where are they going to get the extra staff Whitewavemark2?
Have they got a magic staff tree ?
It takes years to train doctors and nurses.
Same place as the Tories are getting them presumably!
Visas for immigrant nurses and doctors, and of course more courses opened for doctor.
Trainee nurses work on the job.
My second cousin was employed to help nhs staff during covid when she was training to be a doctor. She said it gave her huge experience and an idea how nursing staff work and the pressure they are under.
Not sure there are queues of clinicians waiting to enter the U.K.
When this was suggested by the Conservatives there was uproar on a GN thread about poaching staff from the poorest countries and denying them health care.
All of sudden it’s a Labour Party policy and all is well…
I still have lots of contacts, and I know there will be a lot of returners, who retired or left the NHS because they were so disillusioned about the future, buried under a tsunami of patients and fearing their lot was going to get even worse, as it has done. I know three retired doctors myself who have said they will go back in the short term to help out their colleagues. Wiring list initiatives aren’t the answer long term, but if coupled with a sustained investment and training plan there is hope of improvement over the first five years in hospital care.
I’m a lot less optimistic about dentistry unfortunately, I think it’s gone too far for a recovery plan to succeed.
Thanks for this, Casdon, it does confirm what I was thinking. I know it won't be more than sticking plaster, but it would fill a bit of a gap.
Oh, Labour are going to solve the dentistry problem by getting teachers to supervise teeth cleaning sessions at school, aren't they?
I assume that the UK is till training dentists, isn't it? Is there a shortfall or do they all just all go private?
Would improving the NHS fee payments help? A retired dentist friend says that the fees were too low to make NHS work cost effective.
Teeth cleaning sessions are a good idea, prevention is always better than treatment - catch them young.
The university dental schools are still training dentists, but the payment system has been decimated, so they can’t make a wholly NHS practice pay, as your friend says. My fear is that the NHS base in dentistry is now so low that it won’t be possible to attract people to start up new practices - many have lost all their dentists, their premises and equipment, and others are hanging on by a wing and a prayer. There’s also years worth of stored up dental issues for patients, many of whom have been without anything but emergency treatment for a long time. I hope I’m wrong.