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NHS waiting lists rise ‘due to pension rules which mean doctors cannot work’

NHS Providers said it was hearing from hospital trusts whose consultants and senior managers are declining shifts.

Ollie McAninch by Ollie McAninch
July 8, 2019
in News
NHS waiting lists rise ‘due to pension rules which mean doctors cannot work’

credit:PA

NHS waiting lists are soaring because senior doctors are refusing to take on extra work in order to protect their pensions, health leaders have warned.

NHS Providers said it was hearing from hospital trusts whose consultants and senior managers are declining shifts, which is having a massive impact on patient care.

One hospital has seen numbers waiting for routine surgery increase by 50% since April, with staffing issues due to the pensions problem partly to blame.

NHS pensions changes in 2016 have impacted upon those earning more than £110,000 a year due to the introduction of a tapered annual allowance.

This is a taxation threshold which restricts the amount of pension growth individuals are allowed each year before tax charges apply.

It gradually reduces the allowance for those on high incomes, meaning they are more likely to suffer an annual tax charge on contributions and a lifetime allowance tax charge on their benefits.

The tapered annual allowance means that for every £2 of income above £150,000 a year, £1 of annual allowance is lost, the British Medical Association (BMA) says.

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Health leaders say the rules mean the NHS’s most senior and experienced staff are being pushed to leave, work part-time or refuse extra shifts.

NHS Providers chief executive, Chris Hopson, said: “It has now become clear that the Government’s proposal to solve NHS pensions problems announced a month ago, whilst welcome, is insufficient.

“We were waiting to see if the proposal would work and it clearly hasn’t. Staff are voting with their feet.

“Trust leaders report that, over the last month, they have had significant numbers of key clinical and managerial staff saying they can no longer afford to work extra shifts and weekends because of the financial penalties involved in doing so, due to the way that the pension taxation rules currently work.

“To quote two examples we’ve heard just this week: A senior anaesthetist who worked 27 Saturdays last year to reduce waiting lists has now said he cannot afford to work any extra Saturday shifts this year because it would give him a large tax bill he cannot afford to pay.

“Another trust’s medical director, a senior A&E consultant who routinely worked most Sundays last year, and was key to providing safe emergency care for that trust, is now unable to work any Sunday for similar reasons.

“In both cases, the trust’s performance and the quality of patient care risks being compromised.

“This is now an immediate, major problem for the NHS. Trust leaders are saying the impact is growing rapidly.

“We have multiple trusts telling us they are expecting a significant increase in the number of surgery cases they will have to delay, leaving patients in pain and risking their problems getting much worse.”

Mr Hopson said trusts said the issue was contributing to poor A&E performance, which was much worse than expected in April and May.

He added: “We welcome the Government’s recent, albeit belated, recognition of the scale of the problem and their willingness to explore solutions.

“But they must recognise that their initial answer hasn’t worked and something more is needed really fast.

“We can’t wait for a long drawn-out consultation process on their initial proposal, which is the current plan.”

A poll for the BMA earlier this year found that many doctors were being driven to cut hours and retire early.

Six out of 10 of the 4,000 consultants in England responding to the survey revealed early retirement plans, with many blaming the penalties caused by pensions arrangements.

Dr Rob Harwood, chairman of the BMA’s consultants committee, said: “For the first time, we are seeing hospital trusts publicly admitting there is a problem; hospital chief executives now acknowledging something the BMA has known for months – doctors are being forced to say no.

“No to extra shifts to reduce huge waiting lists, no to covering for staff shortages, and no to overtime weekend cover.

“Not because they want to, but because if they don’t, they face huge bills, created by the ludicrous pensions taxation rules that the Treasury is so far refusing to overhaul.

“This Government absolutely has to see sense and agree to a major overhaul of pension taxation before patient care is bereft of high-skilled experienced doctors and lives are lost.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said: “We want to make NHS pensions more flexible for senior clinicians, in response to evidence that shows this issue is having an impact on retention.

“We will carefully consider all views on our proposals.”

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Ollie McAninch

Ollie McAninch

Ollie McAninch is a former public and private sector economist turned digital media pioneer. After working in the media for over a decade, he helped develop The London Economic to promote independent investigative journalism.When he isn't contributing articles, Ollie spends the bulk of his time looking after animals, pressing apples and planting trees.

Comments 1

  1. Matt Griffiths says:
    5 months ago

    They do know that they can ask the NHS Pension shceme to pay the tax charge? https://www.nhsbsa.nhs.uk/member-hub/annual-allowance

    Reply

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