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Government aims to boost NHS with thousands more doctors and nurses


Thousands more doctors and nurses will be trained in England every year as part of a government push to plug the huge workforce gaps that plague almost all NHS services.

The number of places in medical schools will rise from 7,500 to 10,000 by 2028 and could reach 15,000 by 2031 as a result of the NHS’s first long-term workforce plan.

There will also be a big expansion in training places for those who want to become nurses, with the number rising by a third to 40,000 by 2028 – matching the number of nurses the health service currently lacks.

Amanda Pritchard, the chief executive of NHS England, hailed the long-awaited plan as “a once in a generation opportunity to put staffing on a sustainable footing for years to come”.

Medical groups, health experts and organisations representing NHS staff welcomed the plan as ambitious but overdue. Richard Murray, chief executive of the King’s Fund thinktank, said it could be a “landmark moment” for the health service by providing it with the staff it needs to provide proper care.

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Source: The Guardian, 29 June 2023

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Applications to UCAS nurse training fell by 18% for September 2023 intake uncertain how recruiting student nurses will be achieved on current levels of bursaries in the future without more financial support.

The Logistics of providing more placements will be a challenge without additional support I guess the devil is in the details.   

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