●Last year 770 students with excellent grades were rejected by
medical schools ●As a result some of the brightest British students are having
to train abroad ●Thousands of foreign doctors hired despite being more likely
to be struck off for blunders
Hundreds of straight-A
British students are being denied the chance to train as doctors in the UK
despite a ‘crippling’ national shortage of medics in the NHS.
UK Mail On Sunday report continues:
Top-performing
teenagers are being shunned by leading universities while the NHS continues to
recruit thousands of foreign doctors to plug a staffing crisis.
Official
figures reveal that 770 students with three grade As or higher at A-level were
rejected by medical schools last year due to a controversial Government quota
system.
The
Government says it takes £230,000 to fully train each doctor in the UK because
of the higher costs of delivering medical education, and critics claim the
number of places available at universities is capped to save taxpayers’ money.
That
means one in five of straight-A students failed in their application to study
at a British medical school last year, according to university applications
body UCAS.
As
a result, some of the brightest British students are having to train abroad
after failing to get into UK universities.
Yet
almost 6,000 foreign doctors were hired in the UK last year, despite the fact
overseas staff are four times more likely to be struck off for blunders than
British counterparts.
A
House of Lords NHS Sustainability committee last week warned in a
highly-critical report that the NHS was ‘too reliant’ on foreign staff.
Committee chair Lord Patel said: ‘It is a farcical situation where the best A-level
students are being told they cannot train as doctors in the UK when we are
facing a major crisis in the NHS. We are not training enough doctors and the
ones we are are leaving the NHS in their droves.
One
in five of straight-A students failed in their application to study at a
British medical school last year
‘We
cannot go on like this. We need to own our ability to train doctors. This is
the biggest problem facing the NHS.’
Experts
say the Government’s pledge to boost the number of UK-trained doctors by 1,500
will be insufficient to tackle the manpower crisis.
Harrison
Carter, of the British Medical Association, said: ‘The Government has failed to
train enough doctors to meet growing patient demand, leaving the NHS facing
crippling staff shortages. It takes at least ten years to train a doctor, but
with the NHS at breaking point and patients waiting too long, we need more
doctors now.’
MPs
have warned there is a shortage of 3,000 doctors on A&E wards, while other
experts have said four-week waiting lists to see a GP will soon become the
norm.
Thandeka
Xhakaza, from Bath, told yesterday (Saturday) how she had to move to Bulgaria
to study to be a doctor after being rejected by four British universities last
year, despite achieving three A-level As in biology, chemistry and physics.
Miss Xhakaza, who aspires to be a brain surgeon, said: ‘It is absurd. There are
300 other British students at my university in Trakia and a further 1,000 more
in the capital Sofia.’
UK
universities were allowed to recruit just 6,071 medicine students last year,
even though the General Medical Council (GMC) registers 13,000 doctors each
year.
To
train as a doctor in the UK, students need to pass a medical degree that takes
five years. This is followed by a two-year foundation course, and then three
years’ GP training, or five to eight years in other speciality areas.
The GMC says 30,778 doctors currently come from the EU and other countries in the European Economic Area, while 72,402 were trained elsewhere outside the UK. One in three doctors in Britain comes from abroad, but last year foreign-trained medics made up 72 per cent of those struck off.
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