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Publication

Is practice placement capacity helping the NHS to recruit healthcare professionals?

Hellawell, Michael
Graham, Claire
O'Brien, Caroline
Publication Date
2018-04-04
End of Embargo
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Rights
© 2018 Mark Allen Healthcare. Full-text reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.
Peer-Reviewed
Yes
Open Access status
openAccess
Accepted for publication
2018
Institution
Department
Awarded
Embargo end date
Additional title
Abstract
Practice placements are a fundamental aspect of preparing students for working in the NHS and will influence where, and in what specialities, students work. Additionally, NHS leaders now consider the issues of recruitment and retention of NHS staff to be as serious as concerns over funding. NHS Providers have outlined the issues although there appears to be little, or no, consideration in terms of plans required for the most immediate future workforce. It is hypothesised that there is link between student healthcare placement capacity and workforce gaps. The policy of increasing training places and of funding practice placements may have a positive effect on practice placement provision and if so contribute to increasing the NHS workforce, but without further detail this impact remains unknown. Along with most aspects of service delivery, planning practice placements using the best available evidence will ensure that the impact on service delivery is minimised while maximising the experience for the next generation of NHS employees.
Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation
Hellawell M, Graham C and O'Brien C (2018) Is practice placement capacity helping the NHS to recruit healthcare professionals? British Journal of Healthcare Management. 24(4): 198-202.
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Link to published version
Type
Article
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Notes