A newly qualified doctor earns around £36000, after five or six years of med school, thousands spent on exams and around £90000 student debt. They work well over their hours probably averaging at less than minimum wage. On graduating they’re sent all around the country for foundation training so still incurring rental costs and being away from family and friends. They can’t chose their trust.
They on completion of two years foundation training chose a specialism and have to pay over the next ten years or more depending on their specialism tens of thousands for exams to progress, professional college memberships and their own liability insurance. It can take 12 years to become a consultant in some specialisms.
They get vilified by the public so who can blame them for clearing off to Canada or Australia where they work less hours for more money and even get a lunch break.
Wes Streeting is talking of scrapping their debt - which is divisive- just pay them commensurate to knowledge responsibility and experience. It’s really not much to ask. They find money for HS2 and vanity projects and wars after all.
They might not run into burning buildings if required maybe a few times a year like a firefighter but they save thousands of lives and improve quality of life of tens of thousands more over their career, if there’s enough of them.
A firefighter trainee earns around £28000 no uni debt. They do risk their lives for others but it’s comparing apples and pears.
I don’t think pay restoration is unreasonable, resident doctors suffered the biggest pay erosion across all public sector.
The country is in a mess, but if we want to encourage new doctors to train, and older doctors to remain I don’t believe we can afford not to pay them as it’s us the public that suffer.
GP is extremely underfunded compared to hospitals and it’s hard to attract new trainee GP. The previous government refused to talk with dictums, imposed a disasterous contract and rather than deal with the situation brought in physician associates. They aren’t doctors though get paid very well for having a fraction of the knowledge seeing half as many patients and rightly limited in scope. Who suffers …. Patients. It’s short sighted and costly to have PA not doctors, and there are GP that can’t get jobs because they use PAs and surgeons whose training is slowed as they use the surgical equivalent of a PA.
We suffer delays and waits and it’s horrendous but I don’t blame the over worked underpaid doctors I blame austerity and the court of public opinion.
Once we have an insurance based system which I don’t see being far off we will all wish we’d found the money for pay restoration, that would attract and retain doctors and ensure restoration of good quality care for us all.
As you can see I feel really strongly about the NHS so none of us suffer these delays and uncertainty and all get access to better care.
Best wishes to all in this stressful journey. 😊