More Caribbean healthcare workers likely to be recruited in the UK amid severe labour shortages

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Caribbean healthcare workers can expect to continue to be recruited to live and work abroad over the next few years, according to Caribbean Employment Services Inc.

The market-leading online talent acquisition service headquartered in Barbados but operational throughout the Caribbean specializes in helping businesses and organizations recruit the best candidates for their roles and jobseekers find their ideal position.

Over the past few months in particular, it has noted increasing efforts by foreign employers to recruit Caribbean talent.

This is especially the case with employers based in the United Kingdom, which has been experiencing severe labour shortages since the beginning of this year.

With the United Kingdom’s staffing crisis worsening in the healthcare sector, recruiting Caribbean workers is becoming an increasingly viable option.

This issue is particularly critical in healthcare, with the COVID-19 pandemic ongoing and a recent outbreak of monkeypox pushing the sector to maximum capacity. According to the Nuffield Trust, the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) is currently experiencing a shortage of 12,000 doctors and over 50,000 nurses and midwives.

Further, the UK’s Evening Standard has reported that some 475,000 additional healthcare jobs and 490,000 social care jobs are expected to be needed in the country in the years ahead.

The UK’s labour climate has set the perfect stage for Caribbean workers to benefit, and this is already beginning to play out. Several clients of Caribbean Employment Services Inc. have successfully recruited Caribbean healthcare workers over the past year.

Additionally, most of those employers have offered quite attractive relocation packages, footing the bill for expenses like flights, accommodation and transportation.

They have also offered impressive sign-up bonuses that healthcare workers would have been hard-pressed to find in their native locales.

 

Continuing efforts to recruit Caribbean workers for healthcare positions could be a mutually beneficial position for the region’s workers who are seeking better opportunities as well as for UK employers who are struggling to fill vacancies.

According to the Evening Standard, a spokesperson for the UK’s Department of Health and Social Care said the government is seeking to recruit over 50,000 more healthcare workers over the next two years.

However, the most recent annual NHS Staff Survey found that dozens of British healthcare workers feel burnt out and are looking to quit the industry on the whole. Additionally, a study by TotalJobs found that 3.4 million British workers are looking to leave the country to live and work abroad. With these factors on top of the already severe labour shortage, Caribbean workers could very well be among those recruited to the NHS.

Caribbean Employment Services Inc. has commented extensively on this situation, encouraging Caribbean workers to pursue the best opportunities for themselves and their families as well as advising Caribbean employers to improve their efforts to retain staff.

 

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3 COMMENTS

  1. … and to the detriment of Caribbean citizens across the region. The English still wicked and bad, bad … bad!

    They messed up with their Brexit nonsense and lost a lot of their KEY medical staff from the neighbouring EU 🇪🇺 countries, and will not admit that leaving the European Union was a COLOSSAL and MASSIVE mistake. Damn fools!

    The English well and know that we’ve always struggled to keep hold of our brilliant graduated medical practitioners from the Caribbean region in recent times, and yet they keep trying to pinch them from right under our noses.

    CARICOM should bring in an EMERGENCY LAW to try and halt this potential brain drain of our medical practitioners.

    Never forget, that back in 50s and 60s, the English wouldn’t accept the qualifications of Caribbeans, and only wanted them to drive buses and wipe dem dirty bottoms in elderly care homes.

    AGAIN, DEM ENGLISH PEOPLE STILL WICKED AND BAD, BAD … BAD!!!

  2. Windrush redux? The WI need to pay their medical professionals more and improve working conditions to keep them here.

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