Number of NHS managers soars while nursing shortage grows The number of bureaucrats hired by the NHS has soared, while the number of nurses fell, official figures show.
The statistics show a seven per cent rise in the number of senior managers on the NHS payroll in one year, at a time of growing nurse shortages.
The total number of managers rose to 32,000, the statistics show, a rise of almost one quarter in four years.
The sharpest rise was among senior managers, whose pay normally starts at £65,000 a year.
The seven per cent rise in one year saw their total numbers reach 10,300, the figures from NHS Digital show. The Daily Telegraph
See also:
The statistics show a seven per cent rise in the number of senior managers on the NHS payroll in one year, at a time of growing nurse shortages.
The total number of managers rose to 32,000, the statistics show, a rise of almost one quarter in four years.
The sharpest rise was among senior managers, whose pay normally starts at £65,000 a year.
The seven per cent rise in one year saw their total numbers reach 10,300, the figures from NHS Digital show. The Daily Telegraph
See also:
- Statistics show change in NHS workforce over time NHS Digital
- NHS hires 1,300 more penpushers The Daily Mail
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