Wednesday 28 February 2007

IMGs

It is a very bad time to be an IMG in Britain. For those who don't know what this means, an IMG is an international medical graduate - someone who took their medical degree outside the EU area. Life is chaotic enough for all junior doctors at the moment with the new system called MMC, where everybody is given their jobs through a centralised computer system and there is an entirely new system of training, as I briefly ranted about before here. I am one of the few to be immune from this intensely stressful process, as the people already on a GP training scheme are able to complete it without having to apply for anything else. Click on this link to see how it's affecting someone else in the system. So there is an immense amount of uncertainty around for most people, but it is much much worse if you graduated outside the UK and Europe. In March of last year, with scarcely any warning, the Department of Health announced that it was abolishing permit-free training for doctors from overseas. In effect this means that if an applicant for a post is from the UK or EEA, and is competent for that post, the post cannot be given to a doctor from overseas.


There are many reasons for this. Historically, 30% of UK doctors have been IMGs, they could train in this country without a work permit due to our need for their skills and the shortage of UK trained doctors. In recent years the number of UK graduates has risen and the number of doctors coming in from abroad has also risen due to the popularity of the UK for training and the access to the assessment exams to work in this country. This in addition to the reorganisation of jobs for MMC has led to a lot of competition for posts. While most people agree that it is important for all UK trained doctors to be able to get a job in this country, and that the GMC should stop encouraging IMGs to come to this country by continuing to conduct the PLAB (Professional and Linguistic Assessment Board) exams, it is the effect on those doctors already here that seems deeply unfair.


Doctors from other nations who come here first have to pass the PLAB exams (which are expensive), then frequently have to work in non-training approved posts to get experience to get to the final goal - jobs approved for training which can then lead on to registrar and even consultant posts if they are very successful. Many doctors have been here for several years, moving around different SHO (senior house officer) jobs, working away from their families (especially if they are married to another doctor), moving around, living in hospital accommodation, uprooting their families and working difficult shift systems. Suddenly many of them feel that it has all been for nothing, they will not be able to get onto training posts, and many will probably have to leave the country and try to start post-graduate training again elsewhere.


I am pretty aware of these issues at the moment, as I am the only UK graduate working as an SHO in this psychiatry department at my current hospital. The other SHOs are all IMGs and they all have a very high level of stress at the moment. Some have been shortlisted for interviews, some have not. Most have spent at least some time on the internet in recent weeks looking at jobs in Australia. One is currently in Australia checking things out there. Others are chasing round gathering information for their interviews, trying to second-guess what the interview process will be like. Several have been ill. A young Pakistani doctor who was working in the UK, and involved in the legal challenge from BAPIO to the DoH's decision has recently commited suicide. It all makes me feel very guilty, both that my job is so safe because I am British and to be part of a country that would do this to people who have been helping to provide a service to our NHS for many years.

3 comments:

Amy said...

Hmmm. I will try to be nicer to doctors, then, if this is what is stressing them out at the moment...
Seriously though, I hadn't even heard about any of this! So much for interprofessional learning!

AdventuringJen said...

Good grief.
I had a chat with someone today talking about just the "normal" issues with MMC and we agreed the system must have been created by a committee of drunk monkeys with sticks. Imagine how much worse our description would have been with this element added in.
I don't think I have the words to express my response.

Mad Medea said...

**Hug** to all medics going through this.