England’s chief medical officer has spoken out against what she calls a ‘lack of humanity’ and support for young doctors working in the NHS.
News
Two thirds of young doctors 'don't feel supported by management'
Dame Sally Davies, who is due to step down in September after nine years in the role, said there was a woeful lack of care for trainee doctors in hospitals today: “Often when I’m talking to young doctors I ask them how many have consultants who know their names – rarely does anyone put a hand up.
“We have young doctors working very heavy hours and the pastoral and physical support has been taken out.
“We need to help our consultants find the time to do it. We have to find more humanity for our staff. If we want our doctors to have humanity with patients, we have to show it from the NHS, the hospitals and GPs to them,” she said in a BBC Radio 4 interview on 28 July.
Junior doctors are feeling the strain because they are not being guided by consultants, said Dame Sally Davies. Photograph: iStock/LaylaBird
Davies’ comments come as a survey revealed that nine out of 10 trainee doctors said they have no one at work responsible for their wellbeing
The Medical Protection Society survey also found that over half did not feel encouraged by their line manager to discuss wellbeing issues. Almost 43 per cent of the 275 doctors who responded also agreed or strongly agreed considering leaving the profession for reasons of personal wellbeing.
Dr Pallavi Bradshaw at the Medical Protection Society said: “Just under two thirds do not or do not at all feel supported by their hospital management – it is therefore imperative that there is the right mix of support from clinical leaders, peers and managers, as this can help prevent the loss of these hard-working and highly- skilled doctors.”
The NHS has admitted there is an issue. Its Interim People Plan published in June named poor leadership culture as one of the six areas to fix to reduce staff pressures and retain and attract talented individuals. It admitted there was a ‘revolving door’ culture, where incompetent leaders are ‘quietly moved elsewhere in the NHS’.
“Everyone who has worked in the NHS can think of a manager or a working environment that they would rather forget,” it says.
The plan recommends introducing “agreed and explicit” competencies for senior leaders, support for ‘genuine’ improvement and staff engagement and rolling out talent boards who would help identify and develop individuals for senior roles.
NEWS
Calls for more mental health support for NHS workers grow amid burnout fears
By Kerry Reals on 12 April 2024
Calls for the reinstatement of UK government funding for the provision of mental health and wellbeing hubs for NHS workers have amplified, as a new survey by the UNISON union warns that the threat of burnout could compound healthcare staff shortages.
Assault of retail workers to become a standalone crime in UK shoplifting crackdown
By Kerry Reals on 10 April 2024
Retailers have welcomed a UK government decision to make assaulting a shop worker a standalone criminal office in England and Wales, but civil liberties groups have criticised plans to ramp up the use of facial recognition technology in town centres to help catch shoplifters.
Teaching union calls for HSE to include suicides in work-related deaths figures
By Kerry Reals on 03 April 2024
Teaching union NASUWT has reiterated calls for suicides to be included in the Health and Safety Executive’s (HSE’s) annual figures on work-related deaths, and is calling for suicide prevention training to be provided for all school leaders.