7 research outputs found

    The Dentists register.

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    "Printed and published under the direction of the General Council of Medical Education and Registration of the United Kingdom, pursuant to an act passed in the year XLI & XLII Victoriæ, cap. XXXIII, entitled: An act to amend the law relating to dental practitioners."Mode of access: Internet.Issued 1879-1921 by the General Council of Medical Education and Registration; 1922-56 by the Dental Board of the United Kingdom; 1957- under the direction of the General Dental Council

    Evaluation of international recruitment of health professionals in England

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    Objectives: To explore whether a period of intensive international recruitment by the English National Health Service (NHS) achieved its objectives of boosting workforce numbers and to set this against the wider costs, longer-term challenges and questions arising. Methods: A postal survey of all pre-2006 NHS providers, Strategic Health Authorities and Deans of Postgraduate Medical Education obtained information on 284 (45%) organizations (142 completed questionnaires). Eight subsequent case studies (74 interviews) covered medical consultant, general practitioner, nurse, midwife and allied health professional recruitment. Results: Most respondents had undertaken or facilitated international recruitment between 2001 and 2006 and believed that it had enabled them to address immediate staff shortages. Views on longer-term implications, such as recruit retention, were more equivocal. Most organizations had made only a limited value-for-money assessment, balancing direct expenditure on overseas recruitment against savings on temporary staff. Other short and long-term transaction and opportunity costs arose from pressures on existing staff, time spent on induction/pastoral support, and human resource management and workforce planning challenges. Though recognized, these extensive ‘hidden costs’ for NHS organizations were harder to assess as were the implications for source countries and migrant staff. Conclusions: The main achievement of the intensive international recruitment period from a UK viewpoint was that such a major undertaking was seen through without major disruption to NHS services. The wider costs and challenges meant, however, that large-scale international recruitment was not sustainable as a solution to workforce shortages. Should such approache
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