05/10/2011

Foreign Doctors 'Must Speak English'

From this week, doctors who want to practise in the NHS in England will have to prove they have a good standard of English.

Before they are allowed to work, they will have to prove their ability to communicate.

That's under strict new rules about to be imposed by the Health Secretary Andrew Lansley.

The new proposals will ensure that patients are being treated by doctors who they can understand, and who can understand them.

All doctors who want to work in the UK will have to be registered with the General Medical Council (GMC) before applying for medical posts. Currently only doctors from outside the European Economic Area (EEA), for example, doctors from Pakistan, Canada or Australia, are routinely scrutinised for their language skills before being able to register with the GMC.

European law prevents the GMC from vetting the language skills of doctors from within Europe.

The Department of Health will give the GMC explicit new powers to be able to take action against doctors when there are concerns about their ability to speak English.

In addition, the Department will introduce new powers so doctors can be vetted for their language skills at local level. NHS doctors are overseen by 'responsible officers', who make sure that they are appropriately trained and qualified for the role.

The regulations governing the roles of these responsible officers will be amended so that they have a mandatory duty to check the English language skills of all foreign doctors before they can be employed by the NHS in England.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: "There is considerable anxiety amongst the public about the ability of doctors to speak English properly.

"We will amend the legislation to prevent all foreign doctors with a poor grasp of English from working in England. If you can't speak adequate English, you can't treat patients."

The Department of Health will continue to work with the General Medical Council to implement the changes, so that the GMC has more effective means of ensuring that all doctors practising in the UK have the language skills they need.

(BMcC/CD)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

19 October 2012
Doctors Skills To Be Checked Every Five Years
The biggest shake-up in medical regulation for more than 150 years will begin in December, as doctors will face regular checks on their skills.
20 January 2014
Labour Lay Out Skills Expectations For JSA Claimants
Labour have called for all new claimants to meet a basic skills standard in order to qualify for benefits. Under the plans people making a new claim for Jobseeker's Allowance (JSA) would be expected to take a basic skills test, involving English, maths and computing, within six weeks in order to qualify.
13 May 2014
Caroline Aherne Recovering From Lung Cancer
Former Royle Family star Caroline Aherne is recovering after undergoing treatment for lung cancer. She is also campaigning for better cancer care at her home town of Manchester. This is the third time the 50-year-old actress has battled the illness. She previously has bladder and eye cancer.
22 July 2013
Audit Finds Faults In Fitness-For-Work Programme
French-run firm Atos healthcare, which carries out fitness-for-work tests on disabled people, has been told it needs to improve its service, following a government audit.
04 November 2010
New Doctors 'Not To Work Beyond Training', Says BMA
The Co-Chair of the British Medical Association's Junior Doctors Committee has spoken out regarding Professor John Collins’ evaluation of the first two years of junior doctor training on The Foundation Programme.