- Three new NHS medical schools to boost numbers of NHS doctors
- More than 200 extra undergraduate places from next year
- Medical school places to double to 15,000 by 2031 in
Long-Term Workforce Plan
Today, the Health & Social Care Secretary will announce three
new medical schools as part of a massive expansion of NHS
training.
The new centres of excellence will help provide a further 205
undergraduate places from September 2024 to train the next
generation of NHS doctors, helping to grow the NHS workforce over
the next decade and beyond.
The new schools will be at the University of Worcester, the
University of Chester and Brunel University in Uxbridge.
Today’s announcement will contribute to the delivery of the
Government’s long-term decision to double the number of medical
school places to 15,000 by 2031, strengthening our health
services for the future and making sure patients get the
treatment they need more quickly.
It comes alongside a new pilot scheme next year that will see 200
medical degree apprenticeships boost doctor training.
These measures build on the NHS’s Long-Term Workforce Plan
unveiled earlier this year, backed by £2.4billion in new funding.
Published on the NHS’s 75th anniversary year, the historic
document marked the first time any Government has set out a
vision for growing the workforce over a decade and beyond.
Health & Social Care Secretary said:
“I’m delighted to announce today that we are making more than 200
medical school extra places available at universities for next
September.
“Most of these places will be going to three new NHS medical
schools, meaning hundreds of additional doctors working on the
wards in the years to come.
“This will help ensure the NHS is set for the future and that
patients get the care they need when they need it.”ENDS
Notes to Editors:
- Three new medical schools will offer at least 50
undergraduate places each from September 2024. The new schools
will be at Three Counties Worcester, University of Chester and
Brunel University in Uxbridge.
- Existing medical schools will also offer at least 55 more
places for the same academic year. This will include 35 new
places at the University of Central Lancashire and 20 new places
at Edge Hill University.
- Labour claims to back “reform” but their own workforce plan
has no new ideas for building the NHS workforce of the future. A
plan unveiled by and shadow health secretary
made no mention of new
professional rules or shorter degree courses. They are
incapable of taking long-term decisions to build the NHS of the
future.
- Labour’s own plan for the NHS workforce entails training
25,000 fewer healthcare professionals than the NHS’s Long-Term
Workforce Plan, backed by the Government.