GPs are earning 14% LESS than they were in 2008, reveals study GPs now earn 14 per cent less than they did in 2008, a study has revealed amid the nationwide shortage of family doctors.
Dwindling numbers have seen the average waiting time for an appointment breach the two-week mark across Britain.
Health leaders have repeatedly blamed the shortage on increasing work pressures, hefty tax bills and an ageing workforce.
But now researchers say the growing workforce crisis is only being worsened by a drop in income across the profession. The Daily Mail
See also:
Dwindling numbers have seen the average waiting time for an appointment breach the two-week mark across Britain.
Health leaders have repeatedly blamed the shortage on increasing work pressures, hefty tax bills and an ageing workforce.
But now researchers say the growing workforce crisis is only being worsened by a drop in income across the profession. The Daily Mail
See also:
- Trends in GP incomes in England, 2008–2017: a retrospective analysis of repeated postal surveys (abstract) British Journal of General Practice
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