BMJ  2008;336:991 (3 May), doi:10.1136/bmj.39555.500613.AD

Head to Head

Does it matter that medical graduates don’t get jobs as doctors? No

Alan Maynard, professor

1 Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York YO10 5DD

akm3@york.ac.uk

Last year’s shortfall in training places looks set to be repeated. Graham Winyard (doi: 10.1136/bmj.39555.457060.AD) believes this is a betrayal of students’ expectations, but Alan Maynard thinks it is inevitable if patients are to get the best care

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

The government, as the main employer of doctors in the United Kingdom, is responsible for planning the medical workforce proficiently in order to deliver patient care. This requires it to model demographic trends, specialty needs, skill mix, technological change, and resource consequences. However, its manifest failure to plan efficiently does not create the responsibility or need to guarantee medical graduates employment.

Doctors cost hundreds of thousands of pounds to train. This training gives them specific skills as well as transferable skills. The training expenditure is a sunk cost—that is, once spent it cannot be retrieved. If medical graduates are unemployed this loss can be mitigated by their finding employment in other sectors of the economy, just as graduate lawyers do if they are unable to find jobs after academic and practical training.

Medical graduates, like all other graduates, gamble when they invest in their training. Their success brings riches, but . . . [Full text of this article]


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Rapid Responses:

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Flaws in the argument
Dylan M Wilson
bmj.com, 2 May 2008 [Full text]
The value of doctors
Deborah A White
bmj.com, 3 May 2008 [Full text]
Elite ignorance
Roland Morris
bmj.com, 4 May 2008 [Full text]
unconvincing, inaccurate and patronising
Jessica K Sibson
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UK needs more doctors and less bureaucracy
John Bache
bmj.com, 5 May 2008 [Full text]
does Alan Maynard's opinion matter any more
christina jane spurlock
bmj.com, 5 May 2008 [Full text]
Thinly-veiled attack on IMGs vs clear signal of things to come
Divya Pande
bmj.com, 5 May 2008 [Full text]
A Complex Dilemma
Neeraj Sethi, et al.
bmj.com, 6 May 2008 [Full text]
It's an ill wind which blows nobody any good.
Roger K.A. Allen
bmj.com, 6 May 2008 [Full text]
I am proud to be a doctor!
Umesh Prabhu
bmj.com, 7 May 2008 [Full text]
Yes and no
Andrew N Bamji
bmj.com, 7 May 2008 [Full text]
Re: It's an ill wind which blows nobody any good.
peter j mahaffey
bmj.com, 7 May 2008 [Full text]
Medical workfarce planning
David J Nicholl
bmj.com, 7 May 2008 [Full text]
Re: Re: It's an ill wind which blows nobody any good.
Roger K.A. Allen
bmj.com, 8 May 2008 [Full text]
At least make it clear to applicants then
Christopher N Gascoyne
bmj.com, 8 May 2008 [Full text]
None
Evan A Bayton
bmj.com, 9 May 2008 [Full text]
Banjos and Cows
Calum N Ross
bmj.com, 10 May 2008 [Full text]
Political propaganda rather than objective review
David M Howes, et al.
bmj.com, 10 May 2008 [Full text]
The art of medicine
Paul E Bailey
bmj.com, 11 May 2008 [Full text]
david howes hits nail on head
benjamin dean
bmj.com, 3 Jun 2008 [Full text]



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