Wednesday, August 03, 2005

As many as 2,000 British junior doctors have failed to find hospital jobs in the latest round of NHS recruiting

BBC News:

The British Medical Association is blaming a shortage of training posts and increased competition from foreign doctors.

One junior doctor speaks about what it is like to face an uncertain future after years of studying.

After spending 10 years studying to be a doctor, racking up £50,000 of debt in the process, Melissa Marlow did not expect to be struggling to find a job.

The 30-year-old medic has already spent two years as a junior doctor, but in the last round of recruitment - most jobs are six-month contracts - she failed to secure a post despite applying for more than 50 posts.

The Bristol-based doctor, who is now going to start looking for locum work, which does not count towards her training to become a senior doctor, said: "It really rocks your confidence.

"It is not nice getting knock backs and it really makes you question whether you should continue."

But Dr Marlow, who has wanted to be a doctor ever since her grandfather died of cancer when she was 11, said: "It was always my ambition to become a doctor and it is probably still my best option to pay back the debts. We will have to see."

She accumulated the debt while completing a degree in biology at King's College London, before doing her medical training at St George's Hospital in south London.

"It is not easy becoming a doctor and it is frustrating when you then can't get a job. I applied to so many places, but had no luck.

"I just hope I can get something sorted out next year."

While it may seem unbelievable to many that Ms Marlow has struggled to get a job when hundreds of thousands of people are waiting for operations and the NHS is crying out for consultants and GPs, her case is far from unique.

The BMA has been warning for months that junior doctors were facing a fight to get jobs.

There are 49,000 junior doctors employed on three grades in the NHS.

Over recent years, the numbers graduating from medical school has risen to 5,300 a year - at the cost of £237,000 per graduate - and there has been a surge in the number of doctors applying from abroad, without a similar rise in posts.

Junior doctors struggle to get jobs

My shattered dream

Young doctors being left without jobs, BMA warns

1 Comments:

At 3:26 AM, Blogger David said...

It is Bad news . Here many questions can be arised .Is the education syllabus is not so good ?or there is any another reason just like as competition.Medical Locum Work

 

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