Home / Health / UK Health Crisis: Nurse Recruitment Plummets
UK Health Crisis: Nurse Recruitment Plummets
5 Dec
Summary
- Foreign nurse recruitment fell nearly 50% in six months.
- NHS workforce growth is slowing significantly.
- Racism hinders progress for ethnic minority nurses.

The UK's health and care system is grappling with a significant decline in international nurse recruitment, with numbers falling by nearly 50% between April and September. This sharp decrease, from 12,534 new joiners to 6,321, is causing alarm among healthcare leaders and experts who fear it will worsen the existing nursing staff shortages. The slowdown in international recruitment contrasts with steady domestic recruitment, but the overall growth rate of the workforce has decelerated significantly.
Commentators highlight that the health sector has historically relied on international staff. Proposed tightening of visa rules and broader immigration cuts could further deepen these workforce gaps, potentially jeopardizing patient safety and care quality. This situation creates an environment of fear and unwelcomeness for dedicated international staff, risking longer patient waits and overstretched services.
Compounding these challenges, a record number of healthcare professionals are now registered. However, progress is hampered by pervasive racism and discrimination experienced by Black, Asian, and minority ethnic nurses and midwives. Many report worsening conditions, indicating a potential crisis point that demands urgent action from the entire health sector to ensure all staff feel safe and valued.




