2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0953-y
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The potential impact of Brexit and immigration policies on the GP workforce in England: a cross-sectional observational study of GP qualification region and the characteristics of the areas and population they served in September 2016

Abstract: BackgroundThe UK is dependent on international doctors, with a greater proportion of non-UK qualified doctors working in its universal health care system than in any other European country, except Ireland and Norway. The terms of the UK exit from the European Union can reduce the ability of European Economic Area (EEA) qualified doctors to work in the UK, while new visa requirements will significantly restrict the influx of non-EEA doctors. We aimed to explore the implications of policy restrictions on immigra… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…This has been recognised as an issue at governmental level, however, the response of increasing medical student numbers will not start to impact until 2028 at the earliest 32. An International GP recruitment programme has been set up,33 initially targeting GPs from the European Economic Area; however, there are concerns that uncertainties surrounding Brexit have impact on its success, and may result in EEA GPs currently working in the UK returning home 34…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has been recognised as an issue at governmental level, however, the response of increasing medical student numbers will not start to impact until 2028 at the earliest 32. An International GP recruitment programme has been set up,33 initially targeting GPs from the European Economic Area; however, there are concerns that uncertainties surrounding Brexit have impact on its success, and may result in EEA GPs currently working in the UK returning home 34…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Physicians worldwide currently appear equally capable to practise, regardless of their place of graduation, though it has been raised that internationally graduated physicians may have fewer resources, connections, less confidence, or support [17]. There is also evidence that they often take positions that are less attractive, have higher workloads, serve more deprived areas, and are insufficiently resourced [13]. Furthermore, when directly compared, quality of care appears no different to that of domestic graduates in multiple countries [4144].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Are regulatory sanctions related to personal characteristics of physicians such as age, race, or sex? This question is of wide interest globally [17], especially for the domains of policy-making, education, employment, and liability insurance; because such characteristics, and whether physicians qualified domestically or internationally, figure centrally in live migration and equality issues [8–13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…British general practice today continues to be shaped by these dynamics: much of the GP workforce comprises non-UK-qualified GPs who work longer hours and serve a larger number of patients in deprived areas 3. This has wider implications for medicine and healthcare.…”
Section: Nature Of “Doctor Shortages”mentioning
confidence: 99%