Healthcare sector in ‘dire need’ of skilled professionals, says Bleasdale

The UK healthcare sector remains in “dire need” of highly skilled healthcare professionals, according to Kate Bleasdale, executive vice chairman of medical staffing specialist Healthcare Locums.

Bleasdale’s comments follow Home Secretary Theresa May’s announcement this week that the government is introduce a cap of 21,700 on the number of skilled workers from outside the European Economic Area allowed into the UK.

“There is still plenty of scope for the recruitment of overseas healthcare staff into the UK, as shortage occupations will continue to be privileged. The UK is in dire need of many highly skilled professionals such as specialist nurses and midwives, radiographers, physiotherapists, qualified social workers and doctors of all grades and specialties.

“We are now in a global market for healthcare staff, and demand and supply dynamics strongly suggest that we will continue to see healthy movement of health and social care professionals, both into and out of the UK and all over the globe.”

John Faraguna, managing director of Hays Health and Social Care, adds: “It isn’t realistic to cut the supply of skilled workers into the UK without seeing an adverse impact on our ability to deliver frontline services. In our dealings with employers it is already very apparent that there is a shortage of workers with the necessary skills.

“Doctors, nurses and specialists, such as radiologists and anaesthetists, are all needed to work in the NHS. The increasing pressure on frontline services due to an ageing population only exacerbates the problem.

“Training provision and incentives to pursue shortage professions are longer-term solutions, which should be developed in tandem. In the meantime, we are faced with a workforce that is more transient, there is greater pressure on services, and we need to attract and retain the best talent to support our economy – not cut a valuable source of skills. Skilled healthcare workers move globally and the UK’s loss will be other countries’ gain.”