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			 UK 
			health service risks 350,000 staff gap by 2030: thinktanks 
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		[November 15, 2018]  
		LONDON (Reuters) - Lack of staff now 
		represents a bigger challenge to Britain's health service than funding 
		and the system could face a 350,000 personnel shortage by 2030, leading 
		health thinktanks warned on Thursday. | 
        
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			 The situation is deteriorating in part due to "restrictive 
			immigration policies exacerbated by Brexit", as well as the high 
			numbers of doctors and nurses leaving their jobs early. 
 The King’s Fund, Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation said there was 
			already a current shortage of more than 100,000 staff the National 
			Health Service (NHS) and, based on current trends, the gap could 
			reach almost 250,000 by 2030.
 
 "If the emerging trend of staff leaving the workforce early 
			continues and the pipeline of newly trained staff and international 
			recruits does not rise sufficiently, this number could be more than 
			350,000 by 2030," they said.
 
			
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			The government has pledged a 20.5 billion pounds ($26.6 billion) a 
			year cash boost for the NHS but the thinktanks said if substantial 
			staff shortages continued there was a risk that some of the money 
			for front-line services would go unspent.
 (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
 
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