The NHS has been hiring more nurses from countries on the WHO’s ‘red list’ since the end of the Brexit transition period, a new study has found.
‘Health and Brexit: six years on’, a new report from the Nuffield Trust, found that the impact of the UK’s separation from the European Union has made several challenges even more difficult for the NHS and social care to handle.
Related Article: Second world nursing report to be launched on International Nurses Day
Nuffield Trust Brexit programme lead, Mark Dayan, said: ‘ The health and care sector is still reeling from the effects of a global pandemic and is now grappling with rising cost pressures. The effects of Brexit appear to have added to the severe challenges and problems the NHS currently faces.
‘Meanwhile, a slowdown in EU and EFTA [European Free Trade Association] recruitment is making shortages of urgently needed care workers, dentists and specialist doctors even worse’
They noted that Brexit had been associated with significant increases in recruitment from countries on the Support and Safeguard List, otherwise known as the red list, of lower- and middle-income countries experiencing healthcare staff shortages that compromise universal coverage.
Recruitment from these nations, which include Nepal, Ghana, and Nigeria, is restricted by the Government’s code of conduct, which stipulates that direct recruitment from these countries risks undermining their healthcare systems.
Related Article: New report offers practice nurses with tips and advice on negotiating pay
While individuals in red list countries are able to directly apply for job vacancies in the UK, NHS employers are supposed to refrain from actively recruiting from these countries.
However, the Nuffield report now claims that since the end of the Brexit transition period ‘sharp increases in a short period of time in specific trusts could also suggest active recruitment drives being organised by the NHS or from agencies it hires, targeted at red list countries.’
Since Brexit, one London trust increased its share of red list staff by 265 between 2019 and 2022, while a large trust outside of London recruited 215 more red list staff out of a total staff increase of only 570.
Such rapid and localised increases in red list staff, according to the report, may be an indication that active recruitment is taking place, putting the healthcare systems of vulnerable nations at risk.
Related Article: New qualification aims to help care leaders harness cutting-edge technology
Since such recruitment drives are not officially supposed to be taking place, these can also lead to ‘ behaviour ranging from lack of oversight of incoming staff to abusive practices’ targeted at international recruits.