Medical experts reject claims that reversing the “feminisation” of general practice will solve the UK’s acute GP workforce crisis.
General practice faces a deepening workforce crisis that won’t be solved by recruiting more male doctors, medical experts have warned. The BMJ has challenged suggestions that the growing proportion of female GPs is behind staffing shortages across the NHS.
The UK has almost 16% fewer fully qualified GPs per population than other high-income countries, according to government data. This stark shortfall has left practices struggling to meet patient demand despite successive promises to expand GP numbers.
The Numbers Behind the Crisis
England had 5% fewer fully trained whole-time equivalent GPs in November 2021 than in 2015. This decline came despite government commitments to boost GP recruitment and training places.
Data from the General Medical Council shows female doctors registered to practise in the UK are growing at a faster rate than males. But medical workforce experts argue this trend reflects broader changes in medical education rather than the cause of staffing problems.
The proportion of UK medical graduates choosing general practice training isn’t increasing. Many training places are now filled by international medical graduates rather than homegrown talent.
Why Gender Isn’t the Problem
Women comprise three-quarters of the NHS workforce overall. Yet they face higher burnout rates and remain underrepresented in senior roles despite their growing numbers in medical training.
General practice is described as the bedrock of the NHS but faces systemic challenges that go far beyond workforce composition. Successive governments have responded with structural changes and additional roles rather than addressing core recruitment and retention issues.
The government plans a refreshed NHS workforce plan focused on shifting care to community settings. This follows Lord Darzi’s report highlighting systemic NHS issues including historic underinvestment in primary care.
What Needs to Change
Healthcare unions including the Royal College of Nursing warn the crisis demands urgent funding for fair pay and terms. Without this, they predict continued instability in GP recruitment and retention.
Medical experts call for radical action on training expansion and better working conditions. Simply changing the gender balance won’t address the fundamental pressures driving doctors away from general practice.
Source: @bmj_latest
Key Takeaways
- UK has 16% fewer GPs per population than other wealthy nations despite government expansion promises
- Female doctors are growing faster than males but experts say gender composition isn’t causing the workforce crisis
- Training places increasingly filled by international graduates as UK medical students choose other specialties
What This Means for Kent Residents
Kent residents continue facing GP access challenges as local practices struggle with the same national recruitment crisis affecting surgeries across England. NHS Kent and Medway Integrated Care Board reports ongoing primary care pressures including long waits for routine appointments. For urgent health needs, residents should call NHS 111 or check with their local Primary Care Network for extended access hubs that may offer evening and weekend appointments during these workforce strains.