So he went through all of that, getting lambasted in the media by mouth breathers with 4 GCSEs, knowing he was so close to completing his training that he likely would never see any of the money from a potential pay rise? Fair play.
Understanding the complexities around junior doctors' roles is key. 'Junior' often doesn't reflect their extensive training or the critical roles they play in healthcare. While salary progression is a standard across industries, the term may undervalue their contribution. Economic challenges post-COVID have indeed strained NHS funding, affecting everyone. It's vital to balance economic realities with fair compensation and recognition for doctors' vital work. Constructive dialogue is needed, recognizing both the economic constraints and the significant dedication and skill of medical professionals
Medical “professionals” are dedicated to their own self interest - patients are a major inconvenience. NHS doctors are among the highest paid in Europe but provide one of the worst services in Europe.
‘Junior’ is a misleading term. A junior doctor can have 6 years at medical school and 8 years working as a doctor under their belt, they can be the most senior doctor running the emergency department/on the wards/leading a surgery. Their pay does not reflect that
@@Bringon-dw8dx don't you understand anything? The economy is what DRIVES funds to the NHS. The economy is SHIT for everyone post COVID! Lockdowns and paying people to stay at home. The is no money left to run the bloated NHS... EVERYONE is struggling..not just greedy juvenile doctors! I am coming in as a med student.. at this point I'll be LUCKY to have a fucking job at all.
So he went through all of that, getting lambasted in the media by mouth breathers with 4 GCSEs, knowing he was so close to completing his training that he likely would never see any of the money from a potential pay rise? Fair play.
Understanding the complexities around junior doctors' roles is key. 'Junior' often doesn't reflect their extensive training or the critical roles they play in healthcare. While salary progression is a standard across industries, the term may undervalue their contribution. Economic challenges post-COVID have indeed strained NHS funding, affecting everyone. It's vital to balance economic realities with fair compensation and recognition for doctors' vital work. Constructive dialogue is needed, recognizing both the economic constraints and the significant dedication and skill of medical professionals
Medical “professionals” are dedicated to their own self interest - patients are a major inconvenience.
NHS doctors are among the highest paid in Europe but provide one of the worst services in Europe.
@@taffyterrier as a trainee myself, I agree with you. The JDs are greedy fucks and don't understand economics
@@taffyterrier I agree. I'm more your way if thinking tbh..
NHS Strikes Patients Are Paying With Their Lives!☠️
It’s a shame the government disagree with you or don’t care
Exactly junior means junior and the salary reflects . Pass and you earn more like any other industry
Greed greed greed shame on them
Greed greed greed indeed. I'm going into medicine because I've had other jobs before.. actual jobs
‘Junior’ is a misleading term. A junior doctor can have 6 years at medical school and 8 years working as a doctor under their belt, they can be the most senior doctor running the emergency department/on the wards/leading a surgery.
Their pay does not reflect that
@@Bringon-dw8dx don't you understand anything? The economy is what DRIVES funds to the NHS. The economy is SHIT for everyone post COVID! Lockdowns and paying people to stay at home.
The is no money left to run the bloated NHS...
EVERYONE is struggling..not just greedy juvenile doctors! I am coming in as a med student.. at this point I'll be LUCKY to have a fucking job at all.
@@Bringon-dw8dx I agree, junior doctor is misleading. It should be juvenile doctors... Well only the ones who join unions, leftist Marxist types.
Sure, attack the man not the message. Trashy journalism