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Junior doctor

In the United Kingdom, junior doctors are qualified medical practitioners working whilst engaged in postgraduate training. The period of being a junior doctor starts when they qualify as a medical practitioner following graduation with a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery degree and start the UK Foundation Programme, it culminates in a post as a consultant, a general practitioner (GP), or some other non-training post, such as a specialty doctor or associate specialist post.

The term junior doctor currently incorporates the grades of Foundation doctor and Specialty registrar. Prior to 2007 it included the grades of Pre-registration house officer, Senior house officer and Specialist registrar. During this time junior doctors will do postgraduate examinations to become members of a Medical royal college relevant to the specialty in which they are training, for example Membership of the Royal College of Physicians for doctors specialising in Internal medicine, Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons for doctors specialising in surgery or Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners for doctors specialising in family medicine. Doctors typically may be junior doctors for 8–20 years, and this may be extended by doing research towards a higher degree, for example towards a Doctor of Philosophy or Doctor of Medicine degree. In England there are around 71,000 junior doctors.[1]

Working hours

In Europe and the US there has been some reduction of the working hours of doctors who are in postgraduate training, in line with recommendations and legislation aimed at improving patient safety and doctors’ working conditions.[2] In 1991 the government, the NHS and the British Medical Association (BMA) agreed a package of measures on working hours, pay and conditions which was called the New Deal for Junior Doctors. The Doctors' duty hours, which were felt to be excessive, were reduced to a maximum average of 56 hours actual work and 72 hours on call duty per week, although the change was not enforced until 1 December 2000.[3] The European Working Time Directive (EWTD) sets out minimum health and safety requirements for the organisation of working time. The EWTD required the average working week to fall to 48 hours or less by 2009.[4]

The shortening of junior doctors' working hours had implications for how training programmes are organised, especially for specialties such as surgery where there was a tradition of maximising the hours of experience.[4] Most studies that have looked at a reduction of junior doctors working hours have found either a beneficial or neutral impact in terms of measures of patient safety, clinical outcomes and postgraduate training.[2]

The reduction in number of hours worked by junior doctors is one of the factors leading to blurring distinctions between them and other clinical professions such as nurse practitioners who also perform complex tasks.[5]

Migration

An Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development survey in December 2015 showed that 35.4% of NHS doctors, 34,000, were born abroad compared with 5% in Italy, 10.7% in Germany and 19.5% in France. The UK was the second highest exporter of doctors, second only to Germany, with 17,000 British doctors working in other OECD countries. These figures are for all doctors in the NHS, not just junior doctors.[6]

According to the Career Destination Report published by the UK Foundation Programme Office in 2019, an increasing number of UK junior doctors are seeking to take up work abroad.[7][8] A report by the General Medical Council described a number of "push" and "pull" factors, including seeking a better work-life balance and wanting to take advantage of other opportunities abroad.[9] Notably most doctors who complete foundation training do eventually return to specialty training in the UK within three years.[10]

Modernising medical careers

In 2005 postgraduate medical training was significantly changed in the Modernising Medical Careers programme. A two-year Foundation Programme was introduced for newly qualified doctors, the number of years of postgraduate training changed in some specialities, and doctors needed to decide which speciality to follow sooner after graduation.[11]

There were later initiatives to engage junior doctors in NHS leadership; junior doctors are seen as essential to the drives to achieve efficiency savings in the NHS since 2010.[12]

NHS Medical Career Grades
Old System New System (Modernising Medical Careers)
Year 1: Pre-registration House Officer (PRHO)

1 year

Foundation Programme: 2 years
Year 2: Senior House Officer (SHO) a minimum of 2 years, although often more.
Year 3: Specialty Registrar (StR) in a hospital specialty: 6–8 years Specialty Registrar (StR) in general practice: 3 years
Year 4: Specialist Registrar: 4–6 years GP Registrar: 1 year
Year 5: General Practitioner

total time in training: 4 years

Years 6-8: General Practitioner

total time in training: 5 years

Year 9: Consultant

total time in training: minimum 79 years

Consultant

total time in training: 810 years*

Optional Training may be extended by pursuing medical research (usually two-three years), usually with clinical duties as well Training may be extended by obtaining an Academic Clinical Fellowship for research, or a Clinical Fellowship for sub-specialisation. *due to competition for consultant posts, it may take longer than 8 years to gain Consultant status .

Pay and conditions

The NHS Careers web site stated in 2019:[13]

As a doctor in training you’ll earn a basic salary, plus pay for any hours over 40 per week, a 37 per cent enhancement for working nights, a weekend allowance for any work at the weekend, an availability allowance if you are required to be available on-call, and other potential pay premia.

In Foundation training, you will earn a basic salary of £27,689 (in Foundation Year 1) to £32,050 (in Foundation Year 2).

If you’re a doctor starting your specialist training in 2019 your basic starting salary will be £37,935 to £48,075.

The basic salaries outlined are defined for a contract of 40 hours per week. Salaries are increased proportionally for any extra hours worked on average per week. Any hours outside "social" hours, namely 9pm and 7am, are supplemented by a 37% enhanced rate. Weekend duty is paid as a percentage bonus, up to 10% of the basic salary for working alternate (1 in 2) weekends. Other bonuses are also available for being non-resident on-call (being not physically on site, but available to answer calls or come in to hospital if necessary), for recruitment into academia and undersubscribed specialties, and for doctors living and working in London.[14][15][16] In 2015 NHS Employers reported the total annual earnings for foundation doctors in England averaged just over £36,000. While the basic starting salary for doctors in speciality training was £30,002, NHS Employers were reporting that average earnings in this group of doctors was nearly £53,000.[17]

In 2013 graduates who had studied medicine or dentistry were the most likely to be employed and had the highest average gross annual pay when compared to graduates who studied other subjects.[18] In 2015, the average starting salary of junior doctors was the third-highest of all graduate starting salaries, after dentistry and chemical engineering.[19] In 2016, it was reported that after 10 years of employment medicine graduates had the highest salary of all degrees.[20] Research conducted in December 2014 showed that across a range of other jobs, almost a third of graduate programmes at Britain's best known and leading employers paid starting salaries of more than £35,000; however, 83% of these leading employers reported that they were recruiting for jobs in London where salaries are higher,[21][22] whereas NHS salaries are set on a nationwide basis, with doctors in London given an additional payment (£2,162 as of 2013) known as London weighting to compensate for increased cost of living.[23]

Since 2007 junior doctors have been receiving below inflation salary rises.[24] The independent Review Body on Doctors' and Dentists' Remuneration (DDRB) takes evidence from a range of sources and makes recommendations around pay; in 2015 they recommended a 1% pay increase.[25] In 2005, the average starting earnings (salary plus bonuses) for a medical graduate was £32,086.[26] In an inflationary environment all wage-earners, including doctors, may find the buying power of their income becomes less; some describe this as a real-terms cut in pay of 15% between 2007-2014.[25] In 2019, the British Medical Association came to an agreement with NHS England to settle for a guaranteed 2% annual pay rise until 2023.[27]

Junior doctors in England have initiated their longest-ever strike, protesting against pay disparities within the National Health Service (NHS). The strike, which began recently in 13 July 2023 and will continue for five days until Tuesday, 18 July 2023, has led to the postponement of appointments and disruptions in healthcare services. While emergency care remains accessible, patients are advised to seek alternative options for minor health concerns. The ongoing dispute revolves around the demand for a 35% pay increase to address below-inflation salary increments over the past 15 years. The impact on patient care, NHS costs, and waiting list reduction is a matter of significant concern.[28]

Expenses

Doctors pay professional annual fees to maintain registration with the General Medical Council and medical indemnity cover. Junior doctors also incur costs associated with training courses, preparing for and sitting exams and college membership; training can be associated with £420-£3,000 of professional fees annually, depending on stage of training and level of income.[29] English students embarking on a medical degree could in 2015 expect to pay £40,000 on university tuition fees alone.[30] Student loans are available to meet these costs, with repayment starting as soon as individuals begin working as a junior doctor.[30] University tuition in Scotland is free for students ordinarily resident in Scotland, and grants and loans are available to help with living costs.[31]

Changes to working patterns of doctors meant there was no longer a requirement for first year junior doctors to be resident, and from 2008 free accommodation was no longer provided by employers.[32] The British Medical Association said that this amounted to a £4,800 annual pay cut for those who might have previously lived at the hospital rather than independently, but the numbers of doctors involved was not clear.[32] Ann Keen, Labour Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Health Services, stated "The provision of free accommodation for foundation year 1 doctors who are on call at night, is dependent on the contract of employment of the junior doctor, which is for agreement locally. The Junior Doctors Terms and Conditions of Service continue to provide that if a doctor is contractually required to live in hospital accommodation no charges should be made for the accommodation provided."[33]

Prospects

The NHS Careers web site states:[13]

If you’re working as a specialty doctor you’ll earn a basic salary of £37,923 to £70,718.

As a consultant you'll earn a basic salary of £76,761 to £103,490 per year. ... You may apply for local and national Clinical Excellence Awards... If you take on extra responsibilities ... you may expect to be paid more.

Consultants can also supplement their salary by working in private practice.

There are two contractual options for GPs. They can be:

1) independent contractors who are in charge of running their own practices as business either alone or in partnerships. They have autonomy in how services are delivered according to their contract with the Clinical Commissioning Group. In England, these GPs have increasing responsibility for the commissioning of hospital services for the community

2) salaried GPs who are employees of independent contractor practices or directly employed by primary care organisations. The pay range for salaried GPs is £56,525 to £85,298.

Pension scheme

Junior doctors may pay into the NHS Pension Scheme which from April 2015 has been a Career Average Revalued Earnings (CARE) scheme. The 2015 scheme involves paying towards a pension which will be based on the average of a member's pensionable earnings throughout their whole career, with a revaluation of active members benefits in line with the Consumer price index plus 1.5 per cent per annum.[34][35] The 1995/2008 scheme is closed to new entrants.

Contract dispute in England

Since 2012 NHS Employers and the BMA had been in negotiation towards a new contract for junior doctors. These talks ran into serious problems when the Secretary of State for Health, Jeremy Hunt, appeared willing to impose items from the Conservative 2015 election manifesto upon junior doctors in England.[36]

On 12 January 2016, Junior Doctors in England took part in the first general strike across the NHS, the first such industrial action in 40 years. Emergency care was still provided.[37] There have been claims that the Medical Director of NHS England, Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, has used performance target levels to justify and encourage NHS Trusts to declare an emergency situation, forcing Junior Doctors to work despite the strike, a move to which the BMA has condemned.[38]

In September 2015, Hunt proposed new contracts for junior doctors which would scrap overtime rates for work between 7am and 10pm on every day except Sunday while increasing their basic pay in a move that Hunt said would be cost neutral, a claim the BMA say NHS Employers have been unable to support with robust data.[39][40] In response, the doctor's union, the BMA, called for a strike, the first since the 1970s.[41] The strike vote started on 5 November.[42] In November 2015, the BMA balloted over 37,700 of their members in response to Hunt's contract proposals; 76% of eligible doctors voted with 99.6% of doctors voting for action short of strike and 98% voting for all out strike.[43] In November 2015 Hunt said he would offer a basic pay increase of 11%, but still removing compensation for longer hours.[44][45][46] On 19 November 2015 the result of the BMA strike ballot was announced, with more than 99% in favour of industrial action short of a strike, and 98% voting for full strike action. Hunt said the strike was "very disappointing", but declined the appeal for arbitration at this time.[47] He was criticized for failing to answer MP's questions about the strike, with his deputy claiming he was too busy preparing for the strike.[48] Hunt eventually agreed to discussions overseen by Acas. After five days of talks between the government and BMA, Hunt withdrew his threat to impose a new contract without agreement and the strike action that had been planned for December was suspended.[49] The first day of strike action was called off hours before it was due to start (too late to avoid some disruption), with later days suspended.[50][51][52]

On 24 December 2015, Dr Johann Malawana, leader of the BMA’s junior doctors committee (JDC), gave a 4 January deadline for the talks to result an acceptable outcome, or industrial action would be announced.[53] An agreement was not reached by this deadline and so the BMA announced that a strike would go ahead, blaming "the government's continued failure to address junior doctors’ concerns about the need for robust contractual safeguards on safe working, and proper recognition for those working unsocial hours".[54][55] The first day of the strike went ahead on 12 January.[56][57] Junior doctors again withdrew their labour for routine care on 10 February 2016, leading to the cancellation of around 3,000 elective operations.[58]

Rest breaks

In a case involving University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust in July 2019 the Court of Appeal decided that the trust had breached the 2002 contract for junior doctors because their hours and rest periods had been underestimated by commercial software over some years. The case will affect other NHS employers and substantial arrears will be due.[59]

Risks to patients

The period in August where there was a large changeover of hospital staff has sometimes been dubbed the "killing season" (due to a perception that there is an associated rise in the number of patient deaths).[60] In 2009 research looking at emergency admissions to hospitals in England established that a small but statistically significant increase in patient mortality was occurring during August.[61] The limited data was collected retrospectively over an 8-year period, comparing two week-long blocks (one week prior to commencement, one week post commencement). The methodology meant that drawing firm conclusions was unwise with correlation not implying causation.[60] In the month when junior doctors start working - when other factors are adjusted for patients had a 6% increase in mortality.[60] For patients admitted as an emergency who were not requiring surgery or suffering from cancer, the mortality rate increased by 7.86%.[60]

Other concerns have been raised regarding mortality following admission to hospital at a weekend. A research paper published in 2012, looked retrospectively at data from 2009; the study observed an increase in 30-day mortality for people admitted to hospital on Saturday and Sunday, compared to mid-week days.[62] The risk of dying in a hospital on Saturday or Sunday was actually less than on a weekday.[62] The data in the study did not enable the authors to describe the cause of this so-called weekend effect. Subsequently, there has been considerable speculation around whether the availability of consultants was a factor.[63] The authors of the paper have also openly criticised the conclusions drawn by the government and popular media on the paper, saying that to draw such conclusions as to associated decreased weekend staffing levels to increased mortality at 30 days post-admission would be "rash and misleading".[64]

Health Education England produces reports on NHS trusts under “enhanced monitoring” by the General Medical Council, because of concerns from trainees. 20 of these were analysed by the Health Service Journal in 2020. Bolton NHS Foundation Trust and Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust featured prominently. Reports included consultants leaving junior doctors with insufficient support, bullying, reluctance to report concerns and IT problems. It has the power to withdraw trainees from trusts but this was only used once since the start of 2019.[65]

See also

References

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  60. ^ a b c d "'Deaths rise' with junior doctors". BBC News. 22 September 2009.
  61. ^ Jen, Min Hua; Bottle, Alex; Majeed, Azeem; Bell, Derek; Aylin, Paul (23 September 2009). "Early In-Hospital Mortality following Trainee Doctors' First Day at Work". PLoS ONE. 4 (9): e7103. Bibcode:2009PLoSO...4.7103J. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0007103. PMC 2743809. PMID 19774078.
  62. ^ a b Freemantle, N; Richardson, M; Wood, J; Ray, D; Khosla, S; Shahian, D; Roche, WR; Stephens, I; Keogh, B; Pagano, D (February 2012). "Weekend hospitalization and additional risk of death: An analysis of inpatient data". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 105 (2): 74–84. doi:10.1258/jrsm.2012.120009. PMC 3284293. PMID 22307037.
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External links

junior, doctor, this, article, about, medical, professional, designation, junior, doctors, ireland, consultant, hospital, doctor, television, series, junior, doctors, your, life, their, hands, united, kingdom, junior, doctors, qualified, medical, practitioners. This article is about the medical professional designation in the UK For junior doctors in Ireland see Non consultant hospital doctor For the television series see Junior Doctors Your Life in Their Hands In the United Kingdom junior doctors are qualified medical practitioners working whilst engaged in postgraduate training The period of being a junior doctor starts when they qualify as a medical practitioner following graduation with a Bachelor of Medicine Bachelor of Surgery degree and start the UK Foundation Programme it culminates in a post as a consultant a general practitioner GP or some other non training post such as a specialty doctor or associate specialist post The term junior doctor currently incorporates the grades of Foundation doctor and Specialty registrar Prior to 2007 it included the grades of Pre registration house officer Senior house officer and Specialist registrar During this time junior doctors will do postgraduate examinations to become members of a Medical royal college relevant to the specialty in which they are training for example Membership of the Royal College of Physicians for doctors specialising in Internal medicine Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons for doctors specialising in surgery or Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners for doctors specialising in family medicine Doctors typically may be junior doctors for 8 20 years and this may be extended by doing research towards a higher degree for example towards a Doctor of Philosophy or Doctor of Medicine degree In England there are around 71 000 junior doctors 1 Contents 1 Working hours 2 Migration 3 Modernising medical careers 4 Pay and conditions 4 1 Expenses 4 2 Prospects 4 3 Pension scheme 4 4 Contract dispute in England 4 5 Rest breaks 5 Risks to patients 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksWorking hours EditIn Europe and the US there has been some reduction of the working hours of doctors who are in postgraduate training in line with recommendations and legislation aimed at improving patient safety and doctors working conditions 2 In 1991 the government the NHS and the British Medical Association BMA agreed a package of measures on working hours pay and conditions which was called the New Deal for Junior Doctors The Doctors duty hours which were felt to be excessive were reduced to a maximum average of 56 hours actual work and 72 hours on call duty per week although the change was not enforced until 1 December 2000 3 The European Working Time Directive EWTD sets out minimum health and safety requirements for the organisation of working time The EWTD required the average working week to fall to 48 hours or less by 2009 4 The shortening of junior doctors working hours had implications for how training programmes are organised especially for specialties such as surgery where there was a tradition of maximising the hours of experience 4 Most studies that have looked at a reduction of junior doctors working hours have found either a beneficial or neutral impact in terms of measures of patient safety clinical outcomes and postgraduate training 2 The reduction in number of hours worked by junior doctors is one of the factors leading to blurring distinctions between them and other clinical professions such as nurse practitioners who also perform complex tasks 5 Migration EditAn Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development survey in December 2015 showed that 35 4 of NHS doctors 34 000 were born abroad compared with 5 in Italy 10 7 in Germany and 19 5 in France The UK was the second highest exporter of doctors second only to Germany with 17 000 British doctors working in other OECD countries These figures are for all doctors in the NHS not just junior doctors 6 According to the Career Destination Report published by the UK Foundation Programme Office in 2019 an increasing number of UK junior doctors are seeking to take up work abroad 7 8 A report by the General Medical Council described a number of push and pull factors including seeking a better work life balance and wanting to take advantage of other opportunities abroad 9 Notably most doctors who complete foundation training do eventually return to specialty training in the UK within three years 10 Modernising medical careers EditIn 2005 postgraduate medical training was significantly changed in the Modernising Medical Careers programme A two year Foundation Programme was introduced for newly qualified doctors the number of years of postgraduate training changed in some specialities and doctors needed to decide which speciality to follow sooner after graduation 11 There were later initiatives to engage junior doctors in NHS leadership junior doctors are seen as essential to the drives to achieve efficiency savings in the NHS since 2010 12 NHS Medical Career Grades Old System New System Modernising Medical Careers Year 1 Pre registration House Officer PRHO 1 year Foundation Programme 2 yearsYear 2 Senior House Officer SHO a minimum of 2 years although often more Year 3 Specialty Registrar StR in a hospital specialty 6 8 years Specialty Registrar StR in general practice 3 yearsYear 4 Specialist Registrar 4 6 years GP Registrar 1 yearYear 5 General Practitioner total time in training 4 yearsYears 6 8 General Practitioner total time in training 5 yearsYear 9 Consultant total time in training minimum 7 9 years Consultant total time in training 8 10 years Optional Training may be extended by pursuing medical research usually two three years usually with clinical duties as well Training may be extended by obtaining an Academic Clinical Fellowship for research or a Clinical Fellowship for sub specialisation due to competition for consultant posts it may take longer than 8 years to gain Consultant status Pay and conditions EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2016 See also Income in the United Kingdom The NHS Careers web site stated in 2019 13 As a doctor in training you ll earn a basic salary plus pay for any hours over 40 per week a 37 per cent enhancement for working nights a weekend allowance for any work at the weekend an availability allowance if you are required to be available on call and other potential pay premia In Foundation training you will earn a basic salary of 27 689 in Foundation Year 1 to 32 050 in Foundation Year 2 If you re a doctor starting your specialist training in 2019 your basic starting salary will be 37 935 to 48 075 The basic salaries outlined are defined for a contract of 40 hours per week Salaries are increased proportionally for any extra hours worked on average per week Any hours outside social hours namely 9pm and 7am are supplemented by a 37 enhanced rate Weekend duty is paid as a percentage bonus up to 10 of the basic salary for working alternate 1 in 2 weekends Other bonuses are also available for being non resident on call being not physically on site but available to answer calls or come in to hospital if necessary for recruitment into academia and undersubscribed specialties and for doctors living and working in London 14 15 16 In 2015 NHS Employers reported the total annual earnings for foundation doctors in England averaged just over 36 000 While the basic starting salary for doctors in speciality training was 30 002 NHS Employers were reporting that average earnings in this group of doctors was nearly 53 000 17 In 2013 graduates who had studied medicine or dentistry were the most likely to be employed and had the highest average gross annual pay when compared to graduates who studied other subjects 18 In 2015 the average starting salary of junior doctors was the third highest of all graduate starting salaries after dentistry and chemical engineering 19 In 2016 it was reported that after 10 years of employment medicine graduates had the highest salary of all degrees 20 Research conducted in December 2014 showed that across a range of other jobs almost a third of graduate programmes at Britain s best known and leading employers paid starting salaries of more than 35 000 however 83 of these leading employers reported that they were recruiting for jobs in London where salaries are higher 21 22 whereas NHS salaries are set on a nationwide basis with doctors in London given an additional payment 2 162 as of 2013 known as London weighting to compensate for increased cost of living 23 Since 2007 junior doctors have been receiving below inflation salary rises 24 The independent Review Body on Doctors and Dentists Remuneration DDRB takes evidence from a range of sources and makes recommendations around pay in 2015 they recommended a 1 pay increase 25 In 2005 the average starting earnings salary plus bonuses for a medical graduate was 32 086 26 In an inflationary environment all wage earners including doctors may find the buying power of their income becomes less some describe this as a real terms cut in pay of 15 between 2007 2014 25 In 2019 the British Medical Association came to an agreement with NHS England to settle for a guaranteed 2 annual pay rise until 2023 27 Junior doctors in England have initiated their longest ever strike protesting against pay disparities within the National Health Service NHS The strike which began recently in 13 July 2023 and will continue for five days until Tuesday 18 July 2023 has led to the postponement of appointments and disruptions in healthcare services While emergency care remains accessible patients are advised to seek alternative options for minor health concerns The ongoing dispute revolves around the demand for a 35 pay increase to address below inflation salary increments over the past 15 years The impact on patient care NHS costs and waiting list reduction is a matter of significant concern 28 Expenses Edit See also Tuition fees in the United Kingdom Doctors pay professional annual fees to maintain registration with the General Medical Council and medical indemnity cover Junior doctors also incur costs associated with training courses preparing for and sitting exams and college membership training can be associated with 420 3 000 of professional fees annually depending on stage of training and level of income 29 English students embarking on a medical degree could in 2015 expect to pay 40 000 on university tuition fees alone 30 Student loans are available to meet these costs with repayment starting as soon as individuals begin working as a junior doctor 30 University tuition in Scotland is free for students ordinarily resident in Scotland and grants and loans are available to help with living costs 31 Changes to working patterns of doctors meant there was no longer a requirement for first year junior doctors to be resident and from 2008 free accommodation was no longer provided by employers 32 The British Medical Association said that this amounted to a 4 800 annual pay cut for those who might have previously lived at the hospital rather than independently but the numbers of doctors involved was not clear 32 Ann Keen Labour Parliamentary Under Secretary for Health Services stated The provision of free accommodation for foundation year 1 doctors who are on call at night is dependent on the contract of employment of the junior doctor which is for agreement locally The Junior Doctors Terms and Conditions of Service continue to provide that if a doctor is contractually required to live in hospital accommodation no charges should be made for the accommodation provided 33 Prospects Edit The NHS Careers web site states 13 If you re working as a specialty doctor you ll earn a basic salary of 37 923 to 70 718 As a consultant you ll earn a basic salary of 76 761 to 103 490 per year You may apply for local and national Clinical Excellence Awards If you take on extra responsibilities you may expect to be paid more Consultants can also supplement their salary by working in private practice There are two contractual options for GPs They can be 1 independent contractors who are in charge of running their own practices as business either alone or in partnerships They have autonomy in how services are delivered according to their contract with the Clinical Commissioning Group In England these GPs have increasing responsibility for the commissioning of hospital services for the community2 salaried GPs who are employees of independent contractor practices or directly employed by primary care organisations The pay range for salaried GPs is 56 525 to 85 298 Pension scheme Edit See also Pensions in the United Kingdom Junior doctors may pay into the NHS Pension Scheme which from April 2015 has been a Career Average Revalued Earnings CARE scheme The 2015 scheme involves paying towards a pension which will be based on the average of a member s pensionable earnings throughout their whole career with a revaluation of active members benefits in line with the Consumer price index plus 1 5 per cent per annum 34 35 The 1995 2008 scheme is closed to new entrants Contract dispute in England Edit Main article Junior doctors contract dispute in England 2015 Since 2012 NHS Employers and the BMA had been in negotiation towards a new contract for junior doctors These talks ran into serious problems when the Secretary of State for Health Jeremy Hunt appeared willing to impose items from the Conservative 2015 election manifesto upon junior doctors in England 36 On 12 January 2016 Junior Doctors in England took part in the first general strike across the NHS the first such industrial action in 40 years Emergency care was still provided 37 There have been claims that the Medical Director of NHS England Professor Sir Bruce Keogh has used performance target levels to justify and encourage NHS Trusts to declare an emergency situation forcing Junior Doctors to work despite the strike a move to which the BMA has condemned 38 In September 2015 Hunt proposed new contracts for junior doctors which would scrap overtime rates for work between 7am and 10pm on every day except Sunday while increasing their basic pay in a move that Hunt said would be cost neutral a claim the BMA say NHS Employers have been unable to support with robust data 39 40 In response the doctor s union the BMA called for a strike the first since the 1970s 41 The strike vote started on 5 November 42 In November 2015 the BMA balloted over 37 700 of their members in response to Hunt s contract proposals 76 of eligible doctors voted with 99 6 of doctors voting for action short of strike and 98 voting for all out strike 43 In November 2015 Hunt said he would offer a basic pay increase of 11 but still removing compensation for longer hours 44 45 46 On 19 November 2015 the result of the BMA strike ballot was announced with more than 99 in favour of industrial action short of a strike and 98 voting for full strike action Hunt said the strike was very disappointing but declined the appeal for arbitration at this time 47 He was criticized for failing to answer MP s questions about the strike with his deputy claiming he was too busy preparing for the strike 48 Hunt eventually agreed to discussions overseen by Acas After five days of talks between the government and BMA Hunt withdrew his threat to impose a new contract without agreement and the strike action that had been planned for December was suspended 49 The first day of strike action was called off hours before it was due to start too late to avoid some disruption with later days suspended 50 51 52 On 24 December 2015 Dr Johann Malawana leader of the BMA s junior doctors committee JDC gave a 4 January deadline for the talks to result an acceptable outcome or industrial action would be announced 53 An agreement was not reached by this deadline and so the BMA announced that a strike would go ahead blaming the government s continued failure to address junior doctors concerns about the need for robust contractual safeguards on safe working and proper recognition for those working unsocial hours 54 55 The first day of the strike went ahead on 12 January 56 57 Junior doctors again withdrew their labour for routine care on 10 February 2016 leading to the cancellation of around 3 000 elective operations 58 Rest breaks Edit In a case involving University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust in July 2019 the Court of Appeal decided that the trust had breached the 2002 contract for junior doctors because their hours and rest periods had been underestimated by commercial software over some years The case will affect other NHS employers and substantial arrears will be due 59 Risks to patients EditThe period in August where there was a large changeover of hospital staff has sometimes been dubbed the killing season due to a perception that there is an associated rise in the number of patient deaths 60 In 2009 research looking at emergency admissions to hospitals in England established that a small but statistically significant increase in patient mortality was occurring during August 61 The limited data was collected retrospectively over an 8 year period comparing two week long blocks one week prior to commencement one week post commencement The methodology meant that drawing firm conclusions was unwise with correlation not implying causation 60 In the month when junior doctors start working when other factors are adjusted for patients had a 6 increase in mortality 60 For patients admitted as an emergency who were not requiring surgery or suffering from cancer the mortality rate increased by 7 86 60 Other concerns have been raised regarding mortality following admission to hospital at a weekend A research paper published in 2012 looked retrospectively at data from 2009 the study observed an increase in 30 day mortality for people admitted to hospital on Saturday and Sunday compared to mid week days 62 The risk of dying in a hospital on Saturday or Sunday was actually less than on a weekday 62 The data in the study did not enable the authors to describe the cause of this so called weekend effect Subsequently there has been considerable speculation around whether the availability of consultants was a factor 63 The authors of the paper have also openly criticised the conclusions drawn by the government and popular media on the paper saying that to draw such conclusions as to associated decreased weekend staffing levels to increased mortality at 30 days post admission would be rash and misleading 64 Health Education England produces reports on NHS trusts under enhanced monitoring by the General Medical Council because of concerns from trainees 20 of these were analysed by the Health Service Journal in 2020 Bolton NHS Foundation Trust and Barking Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust featured prominently Reports included consultants leaving junior doctors with insufficient support bullying reluctance to report concerns and IT problems It has the power to withdraw trainees from trusts but this was only used once since the start of 2019 65 See also EditFoundation doctor Specialty registrar Bullying in medicine List of health and medical strikes Early career doctorReferences Edit How many junior doctors are there in England Nuffield Trust 31 March 2022 a b Moonesinghe S R 22 March 2011 Impact of reduction in working hours for doctors in training on postgraduate medical education and patients outcomes systematic review BMJ 342 d1580 doi 10 1136 bmj d1580 PMID 21427046 Brown Steve 1 February 2001 Q amp A Junior doctors pay deal explained The Guardian Retrieved 22 November 2015 a b Fitzgerald JE Caesar B 2012 The European working time directive A practical review for surgical trainees International Journal of Surgery 10 8 399 403 doi 10 1016 j ijsu 2012 08 007 PMID 22925631 Lomas Clare 29 September 2009 Trespassers on medical ground Nursing Times Retrieved 22 November 2015 One in three UK doctors born abroad international research shows Daily Telegraph 28 December 2015 Archived from the original on 28 December 2015 Retrieved 28 December 2015 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2019 07 10 Retrieved 2020 01 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link F2 Career Destinations Report 2018 released Why doctors take breaks from their training a GMC report Training pathways report PDF gmc uk org Retrieved 15 July 2023 Hays Richard 3 September 2005 Foundation programme for newly qualified doctors BMJ 331 7515 465 466 doi 10 1136 bmj 331 7515 465 PMC 1199009 PMID 16141134 Brown Benjamin Ahmed Little Yasmin Stanton Emma March 2012 Why we cannot afford not to engage junior doctors in NHS leadership Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 105 3 105 110 doi 10 1258 jrsm 2012 110202 PMC 3308637 PMID 22434809 a b Pay for doctors Health Careers 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2018 BMA Pay scales for junior doctors in England www bma org uk Retrieved 2019 11 19 Pay and Conditions Circular M amp D 2 2019 PDF Pay calculator Personal Finance for Junior Doctors Retrieved 2019 11 19 Nick Triggle 2016 01 04 Junior doctors row What you need to know BBC News Graduates in the UK Labour Market 2013 Office for National Statistics In 2013 those graduates that had an undergraduate degree in medicine or dentistry were the most likely to be employed and had the highest average gross annual pay Top 10 degree subjects for graduate starting salaries Which Medical degrees have and will no doubt continue to have some of the best employment outcomes of any degree in terms of salary expectations and long term prospects Brian Milligan 12 April 2016 To earn more study medicine or economics says IFS BBC News If you want to earn a big salary you would be advised to study medicine or economics says a report by the Institute for Fiscal Studies IFS Just ten years after graduation male medical students earned a median wage of 55 000 the research found Female medical students also became the highest earners typically making 45 000 a year The Graduate Market in 2015 PDF High Fliers Research Retrieved 22 November 2015 How does your salary compare with the rest of the country Metro 2015 11 18 F1 Pay Scale South Thames Foundation School 2014 03 31 Jaques Helen 10 June 2011 How inflation has downsized your pay Careers BMJ 342 d3473 doi 10 1136 bmj d3473 S2CID 80299254 a b DDRB Review Body on Doctors and Dentists Remuneration Forty Third Report 2015 Figure 2 3 PDF Memorandum of evidence to the Review Body on Doctors and Dentists Remuneration Annex 1 A comparison of graduate earnings British Medical Association 2005 10 01 Archived from the original on June 8 2007 Retrieved 2007 08 02 Table 3 Expected earnings for a medical graduate in the first five years post graduation Year 1 Weighted average 32 086 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link BMA Agreed new contract deal for junior doctors in England www bma org uk Retrieved 2019 11 19 Roberts Michelle 2023 07 13 Junior doctors in England start five day strike BBC Retrieved 2023 07 13 Ahmed Usman Malik Shahbaz Akram Yasmin 12 September 2012 Dealing with the costs of being a junior doctor Careers BMJ 345 e5939 doi 10 1136 bmj e5939 a b Ercolani Marco G Vohra Ravinder S Carmichael Fiona Mangat Karanjit Alderson Derek 21 April 2015 The lifetime cost to English students of borrowing to invest in a medical degree a gender comparison using data from the Office for National Statistics BMJ Open 5 4 e007335 doi 10 1136 bmjopen 2014 007335 PMC 4420932 PMID 25900463 Financial help for students Scottish Government Eligible Scottish domiciled students studying full time in Scotland are not required to pay tuition fees if studying for a first degree or equivalent Students may also be eligible to apply for an income assessed bursay and student loan to help with living costs from the Student Awards Agency for Scotland SAAS a b Doctors in accommodation protest BBC News 22 May 2008 Written answers Junior Doctors Accommodation They Work For You 3 June 2008 2015 NHS Pension Scheme NHS Employers 1 April 2015 Changes to the NHS Scotland Pension Scheme from April 2015 Scottish Public Pensions Agency Retrieved 22 November 2015 Wintour Patrick 4 November 2015 Jeremy Hunt I cannot negotiate on manifesto promise of 24 hour NHS The Guardian Retrieved 3 January 2016 Triggle Nick 1970 01 01 Junior doctors strike Treatments postponed amid walkout BBC News Bbc co uk Retrieved 2016 01 12 Striking doctors could be ordered back in in move which sparks fury Telegraph Retrieved 2016 01 12 FAQs on junior doctor contract proposals BMJ Retrieved 31 October 2015 Denis Campbell 17 October 2015 Leader of NHS junior doctors urges Jeremy Hunt to reopen negotiations The Guardian Association Press 26 September 2015 Junior doctors to be balloted for strike action says British Medical Association The Guardian Retrieved 10 October 2015 Junior doctors to vote on strike action British Medical Association BBC News 21 October 2015 Campbell Denis 19 November 2015 Junior doctors overwhelmingly vote for NHS strikes The Guardian Retrieved 3 January 2016 Jeremy Hunt offers junior doctors 11 pay rise in bid to end dispute Payrise Offer A PR Stunt Say Junior Doctors Junior doctors claim Jeremy Hunt s 11 pay rise will be a pay cut of 26 Junior doctors Jeremy Hunt says strike vote very disappointing Jeremy Hunt an absolute disgrace for refusing to face MPs questions on junior doctors strike Cooper Charlie 1 December 2015 Junior doctors strike called off to grant more time for talks The Independent Retrieved 3 January 2016 Disruption expected as junior doctors strike called off Doctors strike called off after Hunt lifts threat to impose new contract Junior doctors strike called off to grant more time for talks Junior doctors likely to strike as government talks falter Junior doctors in England to strike next week after talks break down Junior doctors announce they will strike next week Junior doctors strike live Jeremy Hunt brands strike unnecessary as poll shows high public support for stoppage Junior doctors strike Get back to negotiating table Hunt Operations hit as doctors strike again BBC News 10 February 2016 Junior doctors win landmark case over rest breaks Health Service Journal 31 July 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2019 a b c d Deaths rise with junior doctors BBC News 22 September 2009 Jen Min Hua Bottle Alex Majeed Azeem Bell Derek Aylin Paul 23 September 2009 Early In Hospital Mortality following Trainee Doctors First Day at Work PLoS ONE 4 9 e7103 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 7103J doi 10 1371 journal pone 0007103 PMC 2743809 PMID 19774078 a b Freemantle N Richardson M Wood J Ray D Khosla S Shahian D Roche WR Stephens I Keogh B Pagano D February 2012 Weekend hospitalization and additional risk of death An analysis of inpatient data Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 105 2 74 84 doi 10 1258 jrsm 2012 120009 PMC 3284293 PMID 22307037 Kirkland Faye Campbell Denis 19 November 2015 Jeremy Hunt statement on weekend hospital care is misleading experts warn The Guardian Freemantle Nick Ray Daniel McNulty David Rosser David Bennett Simon Keogh Bruce E Pagano Domenico 2015 Increased mortality associated with weekend hospital admission a case for expanded seven day services The BMJ 351 h4596 doi 10 1136 bmj h4596 PMID 26342923 S2CID 206907375 Retrieved 2016 01 12 Bullying bad behaviour and broken IT uncovered at worst trusts for junior doctors Health Service Journal 29 June 2020 Retrieved 18 August 2020 External links EditA patient s guide to doctors in training by the AoMRC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Junior doctor amp oldid 1170992333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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