Casdon
Payback deals are always time limited though, aren’t they?
Yes, or they could be on a sliding scale, reducing over time.
I think it is a scheme worth considering in principle, but each time it comes up I am cross-questioned about the minutiae, when I have no idea what would be reasonable. As I see it, the issues are as follows:
The cost of training doctors is high. We have more applicants than places, so plenty of good people who want to study medicine. The cost of studying is off-putting for many, as the course is long, but each doctor still costs over £250,000 to train, which is paid for by the state. We need to train more, but the cost is prohibitive.
If people are leaving to practise medicine in other countries it is not that they are unsuitable or that they are in the wrong job - it is that the conditions here are not so good. We need to do more about that, so that people want to stay in the NHS, but meanwhile, as long as people can get subsidised training here then leave to get more money, they will do so, and we will be left with a deficit. As we are subsidising the training we need to find a way to plug that deficit without spending even more, so that we can train replacements.
Maddie, your daughter is no more a yardstick than my son. As I say, he was just an example of someone not in medicine who had a contract that he would not take the expertise that his employer had paid for him to acquire to a rival company, and I only mentioned him to show that it happens in other sectors. His personal circumstances are irrelevant. Similarly, your daughter may or may not be typical - I have no idea. I am talking in general terms though.