The British government attempts to take on the NHS’s workforce problems
Pay, pensions and planning
OF every 17 Britons in work, one is on the payroll of the National Health Service (NHS). Despite the huge headcount, more workers are needed. One in every 11 NHS posts in England is vacant; shortages are reported across almost every health-care role. General practitioners, who are not usually salaried NHS employees, are especially thin on the ground (see chart). This all adds to pressure on those employees that remain. In an annual staff survey completed by over 600,000 respondents, 17% said they would leave as soon as they can find another job. Long-standing grievances among front-line workers have culminated in a series of strikes.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Pay, pensions and planning”
Britain March 25th 2023
- The machine that runs Britain’s state needs an overhaul
- “Honest” Boris Johnson looks done for
- The race to succeed Nicola Sturgeon has plunged the SNP into turmoil
- Louise Casey says the Met is institutionally misogynistic
- The British government attempts to take on the NHS’s workforce problems
- Editing Roald Dahl for sensitivity was silly
More from Britain
Britain’s brokers are diversifying and becoming less British
London’s depleted stockmarket is forcing them to change
What a buzzy startup reveals about Britain’s biotech sector
Lots of clever scientists, not enough business nous
Britain’s government lacks a clear Europe policy
It should be more ambitious over getting closer to the EU
The Rachel Reeves theory of growth
The chancellor says it’s her number-one priority. We ask her what that means for Britain