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‘50% of new UK nurses, midwives from abroad’

by Haruna Gimba

By Asmau Ahmad

Nearly half of new United Kingdom nurses and midwives are from abroad, the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) said, prompting concerns of an over-reliance on foreign workers.

The NMC’s annual report showed that 48 per cent of the 48,436 new nurses and midwives were from other countries, with 66 per cent from India or the Philippines.

Between 2017 and 2018, 2,719 nurses and midwives from other countries joined, making up 11 per cent of the new workforce at the time.

Andrea Sutcliffe, the chief executive and registrar at the NMC, said the new figures showed the workforce “has become more reliant on internationally trained professionals joining our register.”

“These professionals make a welcome and vital contribution to our nation’s health and wellbeing. But we can’t take them for granted,” she said.

“Two years ago, we felt the pandemic’s impact on global travel, and the number of international joiners to our register fell sharply.

“A future pandemic or other global disruption could see history repeat itself, but with an even bigger impact on the overall growth of the register.”

Like other rich countries, the UK has a long tradition of recruiting staff from developing countries to meet the needs of its health service.

But staff shortages have shot up, driven by the COVID-19 pandemic and a dramatic drop in nurses recruited from eastern Europe as a result of Brexit.

Overall nursing staff numbers have increased to 758,300 but a rising number of people are also leaving the register, 27,133 over the last year, 13 percent more than the year before, the NMC said.

Reasons for leaving included retirement and “stress” in the workplace, the council said.

The general secretary and chief executive of the Royal College of Nursing Pat Cullen said the high number of nurses leaving “is being felt profoundly by both patients and nurses alike.”

“We again question how sustainable it is to recruit half of all new nurses from around the world,” Cullen said.

“The UK’s health and care workforce are proudly diverse, but it must be done ethically and come at the same time as increased investment in education and domestic workers.”

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