NHS Workforce plan review
Join Andy and Gandhi as they review the long-awaited NHS Workforce plan which sets out the NHS plans for the next 15 years. Is it any good? Find out with us....https://www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content... Published 29 June 2023Commissioned and accepted by the governmentCosted planAddresses how NHS will meet workforce challenges, 15 years, £2.4bnThe problem is significantStaffing shortfalls have been a long-standing issue and NHS vacancies now stand at 112,000The plan’s modelling estimates that vacancies would rise to 360,000 by 2037 if no action is takenPriority areas:Train - increase numbers of staffRetain - 130,000Reform - Work differently and moderniseHeadline featuresdoubling medical school training places to 15,000 by 2031/32, with more places in areas with the greatest shortages increasing the number of GP training places by 50 per cent to 6,000 by 2031 almost doubling the number of adult nurse training places by 2031, with 24,000 more nurse and midwife training places a year by 2031 providing 22 per cent of training for clinical staff through apprenticeship routes by 2031/32 introducing medical degree apprenticeships with pilots running in 2024/25 so that by 2031/32 2,000 medical students will train by this route training more NHS staff domestically – in 15 years’ time, we would expect around 9-10.5 per cent of the workforce to be recruited from overseas compared to nearly a quarter now ensuring that more than 6,300 clinicians start advanced practice pathways each year by 2031/32 increasing training places for nursing associates (NAs) to 10,500 by 2031/32 – by 2036/37, there will be over 64,000 nursing associates working in the NHS, compared to 4,600 today. Thoughts and CommentsThere are no ‘specific costs’ associated with retention elements of the long-term workforce plan, NHS England’s chief executive has admitted. Ms Pritchardhttps://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/news/pul...The document sets out a plan to ‘ensure up to 130,000 fewer staff leave the NHS over the next 15 years’, however that segment of the 135-page report does not specifically mention GPs. Does mention consultants.Boost your triage skills with our dynamic 5-session live webinar course, tailored for primary care clinicians. Led by Dr. Gandalf and Dr. Ed Pooley, this comprehensive training covers all facets of remote patient triage—digital, on-call, and more. Gain practical knowledge, exclusive tips, and direct access to our experts through open Q&A sessions. Elevate your ability to manage primary care challenges effec Subscribe and hear the latest EPIC episode. Join Dr Mike as he shares how to get started and fly using EMIS to make your life easier with this clinical systembit.ly/EMIScourse