Nearly 700 doctors are likely to leave the Welsh NHS as a result of a recent 4.5% pay rise, the British Medical Association has warned. The warning follows a survey by BMA Cymru, in which more than half of the 1,397 respondents said they could leave and most felt morale had dropped. The below-inflation pay rise will apply to consultants, junior doctors and GPs. The Welsh government said it accepted the NHS pay review body’s advice and was limited on how far it could go.
In the survey, doctors also warned the NHS is “close to collapse” with an overwhelming number of respondents saying they were exhausted and burnt out. Dr Iona Collins, chairwoman of the BMA’s Welsh Council, said the findings resonated with what she was hearing from colleagues across Wales.
“Doctors’ take-home pay has reduced over several years, making the NHS an increasingly unattractive employer,” said Dr Collins. “To make matters worse, doctors are on the receiving end of complex pension tax bills, resulting in some doctors essentially working for free, and others finding out that they have lost money by going to work in the first place.
“This means that doctors cannot increase their usual working hours resulting in no chance of making significant progress to reduce waiting lists.” She said it was easy to understand why many senior doctors were retiring early, younger doctors moving abroad and many vacancies remained unfilled.
“We are running out of time,” she added. “Crisis after crisis in our NHS is making headline news, with the two root causes relating to medical staffing and medical resources. “Covid has accelerated a problem which has been evolving for years and there is no point having Covid recovery plans when there is not enough medical staff to deliver the existing services, let alone trying to increase the services available.”