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NEW
STEPS TO CURB OVERSEAS DOCTORS IN BRITAIN
By Prasun Sonwalkar, London, October 9, 2007 (IANS)
Indian
doctors should think several times before coming to Britain for
jobs - the employment situation has been difficult for non-European
Union doctors, and new proposals have been drawn to guarantee jobs
to doctors trained in Britain. The health minister, Ben Bradshaw,
has drawn up proposals to slash the number of junior doctors from
overseas coming to Britain to train. The idea behind the proposals
is to preserve jobs for the rising number of British medical graduates.
An
increase in fresh graduates turned out by British medical schools
and the availability of a large number of doctors from an expanded
European Union have made it difficult for non-EU doctors to gain
employment in the National Health Service (NHS). During the recent
round of recruitment in the Medical Training Application Service
(MTAS), non-EU doctors could not be excluded from consideration
under court orders. During the MTAS rounds earlier this year, several
hundred Indian doctors gained employment in the NHS.
BAPIO
CHALLENGE UNDER HMSP SCHEME
However,
the situation is likely to change if the new proposals are implemented.
A court hearing is due later this month on the case brought by the
British Association of Physicians of Indian origin (BAPIO), which
challenged changes to immigration rules for non-EU doctors who had
entered Britain under the highly skilled migrants permit.
Putting
forth his new proposals, Bradshaw said that if overseas applicants
were preventing those educated here from getting specialist training
places, "then it is only right that we should consider what
needs to be done".
The
government is proposing that doctors from countries outside the
EU should not be considered for a job unless there are no qualified
applicants from Britain or from elsewhere in Europe. This is an
unlikely scenario given the popularity of medical training in Britain
and the EU.
According
to Bradshaw, Britain now has 6,451 medical school places, compared
with 3,749 in 1997, and each student can cost up to £250,000
to train. During the MTAS rounds, several British doctors who could
not find employment left the country as the issue snowballed into
a major public controversy through demonstrations and petitions.
There
is also a proposal that fresh British medical graduates would automatically
get a first-year hospital training place on graduation, which would
give them a head start over even other European candidates.
Meanwhile,
representatives of BAPIO met officials of the Conference of Postgraduate
Medical Deans (COPMed) after a BAPIO study raised concerns that
non-white British graduates as well as those who had received their
primary qualification overseas were more likely (as compared to
white British graduates) to be found to be not making adequate progress
with their training and referred for remedial training.
BAPIO
sources told IANS that during the meeting, both groups affirmed
their strong commitment to equality of opportunity within medical
education. The discussions included plans to monitor educational
outcomes and address areas of concern where these were identified.
Ramesh
Mehta, president of BAPIO, said: "We are pleased to note that
COPMeD chairman Elisabeth Paice was very receptive of our concerns.
We look forward to the approval of the draft plan by the CoPMeD."
Elizabeth
Paice said: "It was very useful to exchange viewpoints with
Mehta, and to discuss how we could move from concern and evidence
to appropriate action."
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