Nursing Agency Medical Staff in Great Demand as Full-Time Vacancies Rise
/Nurses, midwives and other medical staff Vacancies in the UK have increased for the first time in five years, according to new figures from the NHS Information Centre. Increasing patient demand, a lack of training places, staff retirement and changes in immigration laws are all thought to responsible for the situation.
As a result, agency nurses are in great demand by – Ambition 24Nurses – nationwide, and the agency has recruited dozens of additional compliance staff to assist in the registration and ensure that candidates can be available for work as soon as possible. The agency has one of the most advanced on-line registration systems of any nursing agencies to enable medical staff to manage their availability and receive notification of more work, more easily than ever before, according to the agency.
The new European rules limiting junior doctors hours to 48 a week, which recently came into force, are also thought to have added to the pressure on staffing for healthcare providers. Senior doctors have called for the restrictions to be suspended until after the NHS has dealt with the H1N1 outbreak.
Latest vacancy figures, which report on jobs unfilled on March 31 this year, found that over 5 per cent of all NHS medical posts, which includes hospital doctors and dentists, were vacant. This is up from 3.6 per cent the previous year. The proportion which had been vacant for three months – which is considered an indication of hard-to-fill posts - was 1.5 per cent, up from 0.9 per cent.
The vacancies among GPs rose 1.2 to 1.6 per cent, although long-term vacancies remained broadly the same.
Vacant nursing jobs increased from 2.5 to 3.1 per cent – of which 0.7 per cent were long-term, up from 0.5 per cent the previous year. The chief executive of the Royal College of Nursing expressed concern about long-term vacancies – but even unfilled short-term vacancies leave nurses under unsustainable pressure, he said, with higher workloads, leaving staff too busy to provide the standard of care they would like to offer.
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