NURSING leaders, NHS bosses and campaigners united today to condemn the government for axing training courses which offer one of the “main pathways” for young people to become nurses.
They warned that the decision would worsen staffing crises in health and social care, with campaigners questioning whether the decision was “a deliberate act or incompetence.”
BTEC (Business and Technology Education Council) training in health and social care is one of the main paths for young people, particularly from poorer communities, to join the profession.
In the second part of her critique of Wes Streeting’s TenYear Plan for Health, HELEN MERCER looks at the central planks of this privatisation blueprint
The fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a registered nurse and union member, has sparked nationwide protests and renewed calls from National Nurses United to dismantle Ice and related agencies, says MARK GRUENBERG
With 121,000 vacancies and 44.8% of staff feeling unwell from work stress, the NHS 10-year plan will not succeed unless the government takes immediate action to retain existing staff, writes ANNETTE MANSELL-GREEN


