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August 20, 2008 Est 1999 Scotland's award-winning independent newspaper
Junior medics’ recruitment fiasco set to hit front line
Confusion over hospital posts

JUNIOR DOCTORS have warned that a botched recruitment system could impact on hospital services next week when thousands of trainee medics take up new posts.

With just days to go before the Modernising Medical Careers (MMC) programme is implemented on August 1, hundreds of junior doctors across the country are moving to jobs which have been secured at the last minute.

It is claimed that many do not know which hospital they have been assigned to or what hours they will be working. An estimated 400 medics in Scotland have yet to find out if they have a training post at all.

Junior doctor Kevin Cormack, a spokesman for doctors' pressure group Remedy UK, said there was concern about the impact on hospital services next week. He had heard of at least one clinic which had been cancelled: "I've got colleagues who are phoning to find out which hospitals they are working in, but the HR departments say they don't know."

The chaos is the result of the much-criticised MMC system, introduced by the Department of Health this year to centralise training and cut the time it takes junior doctors to reach consultant level.

MMC has been beset by a series of problems, including computer system crashes and accusations that the recruitment process is flawed.

In addition, around 30,000 junior medics across the UK have applied for just 22,000 specialist posts. Scottish doctors are no longer able to apply for jobs in certain hospitals or region. Instead they face being placed anywhere in the country.

Cormack said the system was tearing families apart: "I know of one doctor who has got a job in Bristol, his wife has got a job in Glasgow and they have a one-year-old daughter to look after.

"This was meant to have been avoided; there was meant to be a buddy system for doctors who were married so they could apply together and at least be assigned somewhere together. That has gone completely out the window."

Dr Alan Robertson, the deputy chairman of the BMA's Scottish Junior Doctors' Committee, claimed morale was at an "all-time low". A survey by the Royal College of Psychiatrists found that more than one in five junior doctors had contemplated suicide as a result of the stress brought on by the fiasco.

A spokeswoman for the Scottish Executive said the vast majority of training posts in Scotland had been filled. Arrangements were in place to manage vacant posts and support would be offered to junior doctors without places by August 1. There would be continuity of patient service throughout the NHS.

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Posted by: get real, Glasgow on 1:20pm Sun 29 Jul 07
The NHS is in dire straits and come Wednesday we are about to find out just how dire. There are still thousands of doctors without jobs in Scotland and throughout the Uk. it is frankly naive and bordering on negligently dangerous to say that there will be "continuity of care", how can there be with thousands fewer doctors who were in post on 31st July, not being in post on August 1st??

Throughout Glasgow, there has been an albeit unofficial ban on annual leave in August for those in the Registrar grade in many specialties which is againsts the contracts but is to try to maintain a service; many clinics and theatre operating lists have been cancelled or "underfilled".

Many of my friends and colleagues without training jobs still have no idea where they will be working from Wednesday, if at all. The Disclosure Scotland and Criminal Record checks will not be completed in time for thousands of doctors.

Although this mess is inherited from the London based Labour government and the last Scottish Exec, its time for the new SNP administration to wake up, take the advice of the medical profession and to be more honest with doctors and patients alike!
Posted by: ha ha ha, Glasgow on 6:24pm Sun 29 Jul 07
the long standing joke amongst the medical profession was that we should not get ill in August (when all the newly graduated doctors start). How prophetic,yet ironic, that joke has now turned out to be because of the lack of doctors!
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