Friday, 13 November 2015
Tuesday, 20 October 2015
A letter
I'm still angry at the government.
But at least one MP understands what I mean: Famous Green Caroline Lucas has sponsored a sympathetic early day motion http://www.parliament.uk/edm/2015-16/539, so I wrote a letter to my MP at www.theyworkforyou.com to bring it to his attention.
Tuesday 20 October 2015
Dear My Local MP,
I have recently moved to constituency to begin work as a junior doctor
at hospital, and so have become one of your constituents. I am writing to
ask for your support in opposing recent changes to doctors' working
conditions and further to express my disappointment in the current
government's handling of the NHS.
I am sure you are well aware of the collective anger felt by doctors at
prospective contract changes. Much opinion and analysis has been
published in the national press, as well as on social media. I expect
many doctors will have written to you before now and you will have no
doubt seen coverage of the large demonstration in London last weekend.
I speak for many of my colleagues in stating that I believe the imposed
changes are damaging for a great number of reasons. The proposed
contract devalues doctors, patients and the NHS.
The contract fundamentally changes the way doctors get paid, such that
they would expect no increased pay for working evenings or Saturdays.
This allow rota managers to significantly worsen the working
conditions of all doctors, and will result in a significant pay cut for
doctors already working difficult rotas.
The contract would remove safeguards against doctors working long
hours. Doctors could be coerced into routinely working longer than
their contracted hours, further demoralising and fatiguing those in the
profession.
The reason for this change appears to be to work towards a 7 day health
service. The benefits of a full 7 day (elective, as emergency cover is
already 7 day) NHS has been grossly overstated by the government. Many
people would welcome the huge increase in staff (and funding) required
to achieve a full 7 day service, but unfortunately there has been no
suggestion of this.
Without extra funding and extra staff the alternative solutions would
be either pulling doctors out of their weekday jobs to cover the
weekends - and the NHS is already straining to operate Monday to Friday
- or increasing the working week of doctors by approximately 40% more
hours. Both are directly harmful to doctors and patients. The contract
would also pave the way for other healthcare professionals to be
expected to work at the weekend and/or face (further) pay cuts
themselves so these concerns will be soon also directly felt by nurses,
consultants, porters, radiographers, ward clerks, physiotherapists and
so on, and on, and on.
There is already a large retention and recruitment crisis in the NHS.
Training positions in many specialities remain unfilled and demands of
patient care are only barely met with expensive and less efficient
locum staff. As doctors decide that the working conditions are no
longer tolerable then the working conditions for those remaining get
worse still as they must shoulder the annually increasing burden.
Obviously this situation is already bad for patient care, and the
problem will only be exacerbated as this contract will force many
doctors out of the NHS to better jobs in the UK or abroad. I am very
concerned that an understaffed NHS will not survive much longer.
It is painful to watch as my profession and the NHS continue to be
undervalued, misunderstood and mismanaged. I do not have confidence in
the Secretary of State for Health's ability to protect the nations
health. I urge the Secretary of State to listen to his workforce and to
engage in meaningful talks. Unfortunately this has not occurred as yet
and many doctors feel forced to take the uneasy decision to vote for
industrial action in the coming ballot. I sincerely hope there can be a
strike-free resolution that allows doctors to feel valued, patients to
receive excellent care and shows investment in the future of the
National Health Service.
I strongly believe that the NHS is worth fighting for and so I would
like to ask your support for Early Day Motion 539: Junior Doctors (tabled
19/10/15), and also to ask what you and the Labour Party will do to protect
doctors, patients and the NHS.
Many thanks for listening to my concerns. I look forward to your reply.
Yours sincerely,
Dr O
MA MBChB
On the 5th of November I got a fairly supportive copy paste reply, albeit vague and without reference to the Early Day Motion I asked support for.
(re-copied and pasted here with names removed)
Dear Dr
Thank you for your recent email regarding junior doctor contracts.
The Labour Party is currently leading on this issue in the House of Commons. Last week, we secured an opposition day debate on the matter where we called for the Government to drop their plans for a new junior doctor contract. We also put forward new proposals which are fair for staff and safe for patients.
Ultimately, the Labour Party believes that it is wrong for the Government to want to pay some junior doctors less to do the work they do now. Labour is concerned that the removal of safeguards which prevent junior doctors having to work excessively hours may leave them too exhausted to provide safe patient care. Jeremy Hunt should recognise the increasing public concern on this issue, stop his high-handed demands and demonstrate a willingness to compromise and prioritise patient safety.
I can assure you that this issue is a priority of the Labour Party’s. In opposition, we will continue to follow this matter closely to hold the Government to account.
I have also offered to meet with a group of constituents and junior doctors who are concerned about this matter.
Please do not hesitate to contact me again if you feel that I can be of any further assistance with this or any other matter.
Yours sincerely
Wednesday, 30 September 2015
Doctors strike: what's all the fuss about?
From the point of view of an internet-generation junior
doctor the level of awareness, anger and coverage of the DDRB contract
proposals is overwhelming (DDRB is the Review Body on Doctors' and Dentists' Renumeration, advises the government on rates of pay). Years of frustration are finally being vented across
social media sites and articulate and human arguments for fair working
conditions and for the survival of the NHS are commonplace.
Until recently the discussion has been largely restricted to
junior doctors themselves, various websites and forums becoming an echo chamber
for doctors to agree with one another, preaching a familiar message to a choir
who are already well aware of the issues and who are more than ready to reply with
similar stories and personal perspectives, and occasionally this can breed an element of oversimplification, hysteria, or hyperbole, particularly as the issues are a little too complicated to be adequately summarised in a tweet or hashtag. However this hotpot of energy and anger is
spilling over and is now beginning to be reported by the national mainstream
media. There have been issues in expressing this anger in an understandable and
constructive way but we are beginning to find a common voice.
Last night I attended a march in central Manchester, forming
part of a slightly smaller but no less passionate crowd than the 5,000 in London
the previous evening. It was moving to see so many doctors and medical students
united in the campaign, and it was excellent to see the support from the
public. It marks the beginning of a campaign to make doctor’s issues well
known, and to highlight the direct threat to patients and the NHS. Some form of
industrial action in the next few weeks seems inevitable and it is absolutely
essential that the public are aware of why doctors feel this is the only path
forward. Without the backing of patients and the public any strike will further
alienate and vilify doctors and pave the way for the profession and the NHS to
be dismantled.
To that end I feel obligated to highlight some key points that may not be obvious to people outside of medicine. The grievances of doctors are multiple and complex so what follows is merely a heavily simplified personal take on the main issue – the BMA website is a good place to start for more details, or the facebook page of any junior doctor. I want to clarify 1) what a junior doctor is 2) why the contract is unfair for doctors and 3) why it is poisonous for patients and the NHS.
The BMA is the union that represents doctors in the UK, and
took the uneasy decision (backed by members) to walk away from junior doctor
contract negotiations after several discussions, realising that the proposals
were neither safe nor fair, and were not a position from which an acceptable
contract could be negotiated from. The government plan to impose this new contract on junior
doctors in England (not Scotland or Wales) from August 2016. The current
vocabulary is misleading, and poorly understood even by other medical staff including consultants. A “junior” doctor is a qualified graduate from
medical school undertaking postgraduate training in hospitals or the community.
The term includes the very bottom (yours truly) foundation doctors, but also
any doctor in training that is not a consultant or GP. Virtually every doctor
under 35-40 will be a junior doctor. The label “junior” sticks even if you are
in your ST8 year of surgery training or have taken time out of the training
programme for example to do research, change specialty or do voluntary work. It
is very likely to be a “junior” doctor that performs your elective surgery or
resuscitates you in A+E or sees you in clinic. These doctors, from new “juniors”
(F1) to experienced “juniors” (senior registrars), make up about 40% of all
doctors working in the country and all stand to suffer at the hand of new
contract changes.
The contract fundamentally changes the way doctors are paid. People may need medical attention at any time of the day and on any day of the week. The NHS is straining but it is providing a 7 day service 24 hours a day. The current government has allowed misinformation to be spread such that patients now fear hospitals at the weekend. At present junior doctors receive a basic salary that rises with experience, and receive a supplement on top of this if their rota involves a lot of night shifts or weekend work. The new contract redefines “social” hours” as 7am-10pm six days a week, so rotas involving working evenings and/or all day Saturday would attract no increase in pay compared to a 9-5. The new contract would increase the basic pay but slash the unsocial work supplement such that doctors working in more acute specialties (already unenvied and overworked doctors such as in A+E, hospital medicine or ITU) may end up with a 15-40% pay cut whilst doctors with more normal hours may have a modest increase - but are at risk of seeing their rotas suddenly becoming much more antisocial without increase in pay. Almost every recommendation of the DDRB contract proposal is worse for junior doctors, and is therefore directly toxic to the NHS as a whole.
It would be dishonest to suggest that a strike is “not about
the pay”, because no sane person would be willing to accept such a pay cut –
particularly not if they had already been silently suffering a pay
freeze/de-facto pay cut for several years (15% less than 2007 in real terms). The current system also does not
seem to recognise the increased amount of unpaid overtime (>5hrs/week on average), self funded
training, BMA/GMC/royal college membership costs, compulsory medical insurance, spiraling university debt (36K for 4 years tuition alone), or essential, expensive and difficult postgraduate exams. The public perception remains that doctors are well paid, and the well-heeled, golf-playing, Mercedes-driving doctor is a persistent one. This cliche is probably true for a small minority, especially a small number of hard working and very experienced consultants that may supplement their NHS income with private practice. But it is not true of the current generations of doctors in training. In truth junior doctors at the moment are paid more than the average UK worker, and pay does increase with experience. There have been several unhelpful comparisons of doctors with the perceived circumstances of other workers. In my opinion it does not help to compare with tube drivers, retail workers, McDonald's managers or physicians associates, as these workers have their own grievances and are of course also entitled to fair pay. Such comparisons serve only to perpetuate the idea that doctors are self-important and entitled: we stand to alienate ourselves from other professionals and the public, many of whom will (unfortunately for us) remain unconvinced that a junior doctor in their 20s or 30s is deserving of a salary that approximates their age in £K, no matter how many bleeding heart "open letter" accounts of their jobs they might read.
The wider issue however is the future of the NHS. In the
short term patient safety is likely to be compromised as doctors working longer
hours for less pay will be tired and demoralised. There will be more burn out
and more mistakes. In the longer term these doctors will continue to leave the
NHS in England. There is already a recruitment crisis in several specialties
including GP and A+E. 20-50% of training positions in GP and A+E remain unfilled, yet somehow
the government expects to attract even more doctors to these careers by making the job less
satisfying and reducing the pay. About 60% of FY2s (second year post medical
school) last year took a year or more out of training for various reasons and
that number is sure to grow as more and more juniors are either forced out of
the profession as they can no longer afford childcare or mortgage repayments,
or realise that enough is enough; their skills and training are appreciated to
a far greater extent outside of the NHS, outside of England or outside of the
profession itself. NHS workers have been leaned on already. If the doctors don't stand up to the changes and fold then I am sure the bosses will go for other professionals. The NHS is suffering an insidious end by a thousand cuts. If the contract is implemented as it is currently I foresee
a slow and sad cycle of positive feedback as for each doctor that leaves the
NHS leaves a slightly less tolerable atmosphere and workload for those
remaining. Morale gets lower and patients are harmed, expensive locum and
agency staff are required to fill the gaps and eventually the public will be
led to conclude that the NHS has run its course and must be rescued by the
private sector.
I am deeply saddened that this is the situation I have found
myself in after years of medical school and only two months in the job. It is a
treasured privilege to work as a junior doctor and I am immensely proud to work
for the NHS. And because I value both of these things I will be voting
alongside thousands of my colleagues in favour of industrial action to protest
these contract changes.
Friday, 18 September 2015
One more junior's voice
So many people have taken to the internet to express a lot of what I am about to reiterate too. Much of it is written with greater thought, clarity and passion than I can hope to here. But there is no defense in omitting such an important topic from my so-called blog. A few plagiarised images will have to suffice in trying to express these concerns.
I really have no idea what the general public know or think about what is happening to the NHS as I type this. All of my professional contacts and a large proportion of my personal ones work for the NHS in one way or another, and each of them feel similarly numb and impotent and downhearted by the situation we find ourselves in. The current handling of the NHS via its funding, organisation and staffing very directly affects me and the people I know. But it also directly affects every single NHS user as chronic underfunding of services and maltreatment staff will inevitably lead to cracks that will continue to erode the service and endanger patients.
I really have no idea what the general public know or think about what is happening to the NHS as I type this. All of my professional contacts and a large proportion of my personal ones work for the NHS in one way or another, and each of them feel similarly numb and impotent and downhearted by the situation we find ourselves in. The current handling of the NHS via its funding, organisation and staffing very directly affects me and the people I know. But it also directly affects every single NHS user as chronic underfunding of services and maltreatment staff will inevitably lead to cracks that will continue to erode the service and endanger patients.
I spent 4 years at medical school, and 7 years at university
in total. Clearly it wasn’t a particularly efficient way of gaining
employability, but even the most decisive school leaver must spend a minimum of
5 years as a student before they qualify as a doctor – and current students now
pay £9,000 per year for the tuition fees alone. As a recent graduate I might
spend ten or more years as a junior doctor, but even if I were to choose the
fastest possible path, and succeed at every hurdle along the way, they would
need to spend at least five years before becoming a GP or consultant.
Not even two months into this journey the government
brutalise the system by pushing through a contract universally opposed,
representing a long list of kicks not least of which is an expected 10-40% pay
cut for trainee doctors. This takes junior doctor pay to pre-2000 levels and is a near-fatal blow to the morales of staff throughout the country. Furthermore the contract redefines "social working hours" to include 7am-10pm, 6 days a week. The BMA, with backing from doctors, made it clear that this was unacceptable and were unable to negotiate from here but the contract will be rolled out from Aug 2016 regardless.
This is not the way I expected to start the career I had waited so long to begin; feeling betrayed, undervalued and impotent. We feel we deserve to be treated better, and it is this that is ominous for the future of the NHS. Even before this recent revelation I was well aware that there are far far more attractive employment opportunities for doctors outside of the UK, most foundation doctors I’ve spoken to had entertained the idea of leaving the NHS, either for a few years or permanently .There is a current retention crisis; doctors are choosing to retire earlier or change careers, and there are unfilled training posts in several key specialties including GP and A+E. As things stand these problems can only be significantly worsened in years to come. Understaffing is already a huge problem, with gaps only superficially filled with expensive locum and agency staff. The cycle is bleak: inadequate staffing causes increased stress and mistakes, the service is less satisfying for staff and patients and so more doctors drop out of the game.
I do a small amount of e-mentoring for prospective medicine applicants, and I am quite often a source of information and advice for applying friends and family or work experience students at hospital. I now feel that it would be dishonest to recommend this path for the nations bright, optimistic and dedicated students. There are certainly other careers that pay far better, careers where you might feel respected or valued, and possibly even where you might have a better chance at a work-life balance.
This is a very good account about the situation, from the point of view of an ITU trainee doctor, and another excellent one here from an A+E trainee.
This is not the way I expected to start the career I had waited so long to begin; feeling betrayed, undervalued and impotent. We feel we deserve to be treated better, and it is this that is ominous for the future of the NHS. Even before this recent revelation I was well aware that there are far far more attractive employment opportunities for doctors outside of the UK, most foundation doctors I’ve spoken to had entertained the idea of leaving the NHS, either for a few years or permanently .There is a current retention crisis; doctors are choosing to retire earlier or change careers, and there are unfilled training posts in several key specialties including GP and A+E. As things stand these problems can only be significantly worsened in years to come. Understaffing is already a huge problem, with gaps only superficially filled with expensive locum and agency staff. The cycle is bleak: inadequate staffing causes increased stress and mistakes, the service is less satisfying for staff and patients and so more doctors drop out of the game.
I do a small amount of e-mentoring for prospective medicine applicants, and I am quite often a source of information and advice for applying friends and family or work experience students at hospital. I now feel that it would be dishonest to recommend this path for the nations bright, optimistic and dedicated students. There are certainly other careers that pay far better, careers where you might feel respected or valued, and possibly even where you might have a better chance at a work-life balance.
This is a very good account about the situation, from the point of view of an ITU trainee doctor, and another excellent one here from an A+E trainee.
According to the BMA it costs about £260,000 to train an FY1
doctor, and a further £300,000 to train them to consultant level. New doctors will now find it difficult to even pay off their loans. It simply
does not make sense in my head to invest so deeply in training medical staff
only to be apparently unconcerned when many of them feel they have no option
but leave the NHS. To me it sends a message that there is no concern for the
future of the NHS, it seems that consciously or not the NHS is being set up to
fail so that in the not-too distant future we are led to believe that the NHS is
an unworkable idea and privatisation is
the only solution.
The level of outrage amongst staff, both junior and senior,
medical and non, has been visceral and overwhelming. We share a keen sense of injustice but are
struggling to find a constructive voice. Today my facebook wall is alive with
righteous anger, though the audience reached may often be mostly other junior
doctors. We cannot sleepwalk towards deeply unfair, short sighted and dangerous
reforms and I will begin by joining many others in writing to my MP. It seems clear to me that a well funded and well functioning health
service (available to all) is of vital importance to a nation, and a workforce
that is present without resentment is essential for this. It is a message that
I have no confidence that Jeremy Hunt has heard, and we are becoming
exasperated at his continued inability to understand the issues surrounding
healthcare delivery, and his continued refusal to hear the concerns of the public
or the professions. Clearly the recent
petition re a vote of no confidence achieved very little despite overwhelming support (220,000 signatures and Mr Hunt did not attend the debate).
I am concerned that the collective voice of doctors in the UK will continue to
be ignored and some sort of strike action becomes unavoidable. I doubt this can
be achieved without alienating the public or putting patients in harm’s way but
there is far too much at stake to do nothing.
Some background and media coverage
http://www.bma.org.uk/working-for-change/in-depth-junior-and-consultant-contract/junior-doctor-contract-negotiations-home
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/i-dont-blame-doctors-for-walking-out-of-pay-negotiations-with-the-government-10506483.html
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/sep/18/junior-doctors-new-contract-cut-pay-40-per-cent
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/11875628/Junior-doctors-threaten-strike-over-new-contracts.html
http://metro.co.uk/2015/09/20/doctors-are-being-pushed-to-strike-over-new-contracts-which-will-risk-patients-lives-5399640/
Some background and media coverage
http://www.bma.org.uk/working-for-change/in-depth-junior-and-consultant-contract/junior-doctor-contract-negotiations-home
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/i-dont-blame-doctors-for-walking-out-of-pay-negotiations-with-the-government-10506483.html
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/sep/18/junior-doctors-new-contract-cut-pay-40-per-cent
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/11875628/Junior-doctors-threaten-strike-over-new-contracts.html
http://metro.co.uk/2015/09/20/doctors-are-being-pushed-to-strike-over-new-contracts-which-will-risk-patients-lives-5399640/
From the Facebook page of Dr Philip Lee MBBS MRCP(UK)(Geriatric Medicine)
Consultant Physician in Acute Medicine and Care of the Elderly
Consultant Physician in Acute Medicine and Care of the Elderly
Tuesday, 15 September 2015
Nobody likes a complainer
Nobody likes a complainer, so I feel real sympathy for my
friends and family who have listened to me moan about my job with astonishing
regularity and passion over the past couple of months.
There are dozens of things that irk me about my job, and
since it feels like I am at my job most of the time I feel irked most of the
time, in dozens of ways.
What is difficult is that despite all of my complaining,
most of my friends and family don’t really understand why I am so angry all of
the time. So I can only conclude that 1) I am not at all good at articulating
my gripes and 2) I am an unusually grumpy and furious sort of person.
There is good evidence for both 1) and 2), but I don’t think
we can exclude the third possibility being true at the same time: 3) there are
several problems with the job at present that are only acutely apparent to an
fy1 in my position. So with that in mind I’ll power on ahead with some more
complaining about a particular aspect of my job, mercifully in a highly ignorable way.
A broad category of irritation is prescribing; managing
patient’s drug therapy is an important part of the role of junior doctors.
On my most recent night shift I got talking to a pleasant patient
who refused to relinquish his usual tablets to the nurses for safekeeping. I
was unable to convince him because I privately agreed that this was a pointless
thing to do.
A patient in hospital is expected to hand over all of their
regular medications to the nursing staff so they can lock them in a safe. A
junior doctor is then asked to copy all of the drugs and doses onto a hospital
drug card which instructs the nurses when, if and how to give each drug.
A pharmacist then checks that this has been done correctly,
and alerts the junior doctor to any mistakes so he or she then can return to
correct them. This is common because very junior doctors have only a small
fraction of the drug expertise as the pharmacists, but only doctors can
prescribe.
Even if a patient previously had complete control over when
to take each drug, in hospital it is the nurses that administer the medication.
The gentleman I was talking to protested that quite often on his previous
admission he was left for long periods of time before being allowed his pain
medication as the nurses were unable to attend to him immediately, because they
have millions of other things to do.
When the space on the drug card runs out the junior doctor is then asked to copy out the drugs once again onto a fresh drug card. These re-writes would not be necessary if we adopted electronic prescribing.
http://www.polyp.org.uk/index.html
When a patient is well enough to be discharged from hospital
the junior doctor must take the dug card to a computer and type them into a
specific and ancient piece of user-hostile software in order to produce a printout
of the patient’s list of drugs (the same drugs as on the drug card) to give to
a pharmacist, who will check the list and dispense the drugs.
A pharmacist then checks that this has been done correctly,
and alerts the junior doctor to any mistakes so he or she then can return to
correct them. This is common because very junior doctors have only a small
fraction of the drug expertise as the pharmacists, but only doctors can
prescribe.
This prescribing process is required for every patient in
hospital, even when their drugs are exactly the same before, during and after
their hospital stay. It creates delays for patients receiving their drugs,
requires the input of and communication between at least three different
professionals and delays discharge from hospital, further contributing to the
already pressing hospital-wide bed shortage.
A patient cannot be discharged until a doctor writes their
discharge summary, and their medications are “prescribed” by a doctor. It falls
to the junior doctor to write this summary even if they have never before met
the patient. The doctor must also prescribe their drugs without expert
knowledge of their condition, or management plan, or why they are even on the
drugs, so often they are prescribing drugs simply because they were on them
before admission. Such time-consuming paperwork never takes priority over more
urgent jobs for unwell patients and so very often discharges are delayed, at
great cost to the NHS. Some trusts employ “discharge locums”, doctors who are paid simply
to ensure all of this paperwork is done and all these boxes are ticked to allow
beds to be freed up. This isn’t an entirely satisfying solution but may be a pragmatic
solution to the issue in the short term: on the same nightshift I was bleeped repeatedly to do some of these TTOs (“to take out” medicines) left over from the day before, and I ended up doing the discharges when I had a spare minute away from more urgent tasks- at 8am the next morning.
Let me quickly insert dozens of caveats; I am not questioning any of the following:
I can see that there is value in having a clear record of a
patient’s drug therapy before and during a hospital stay.
I can see that there is value in allowing nurses to control
medications, especially when there are issues with a patient’s capacity to
safely administer them himself. I can see that it might be important to store
controlled drugs away securely to prevent them getting into the wrong hands.
I can see that experience in prescribing is an essential
part of the training of doctors.
I can see that having a clear summary of what happened in
hospital is important, and I can see why having an up-to-date list of
medications and any changes is important for record keeping and to inform
future management decisions.
But I am questioning all of the following:
I am questioning whether it is appropriate for a junior
doctor (on-call or otherwise) to complete discharge paperwork for patients
they’ve never met.
I am questioning whether it is a good use of resources to
mandate that nurses dispense routine medications to competent patients.
I am questioning why it is necessary for the doctor to
perform tasks that are then repeated and improved by a pharmacist.
I am questioning whether it is safe for junior doctors to
write discharge summaries without clear instructions from senior doctors
regarding future management or follow up.
I am questioning whether it is reasonable to expect
discharge summaries to be completed between 2pm (end of ward round) and 5pm
(closure of pharmacies) when there are a multitude of more important things to
be done.
I am questioning the sense of using a paper based
prescription system that is simply translated to an electronic one (via hideous
software) upon discharge.
Of course, none of these problems would be quite so irksome had we either
sufficient time or staff to perform the tasks to a satisfactory level without
feeling rushed.
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