Research-active NHS doctors are struggling to find time for research amid growing pressure on the UK鈥檚 healthcare system, a medical body has claimed.
Warning about potential risks to patient care, the Academy of Medical Sciences has called on leaders in universities, the NHS and the government to do more to ensure that research in the health service is protected.
It advises the government to allocate 拢25聽million a聽year for a pilot scheme that would allow one in five NHS consultants in 10 hospitals to spend at least one day a week on research.
The call follows the publication of a by the academy on 8聽January that highlights a decline in the number of clinical academics who work in both universities and the NHS. Clinical academics represented just 4.2聽per cent of NHS medical consultants in 2017, down from 7.5聽per cent in 2004, says the report.
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The number of family doctors who are also clinical academics has shrunk as well, to just 0.4聽per cent of all general practitioners, it adds.
The increased distance between academia and front-line healthcare may make it harder for significant discoveries to occur in the NHS, which has previously helped to develop antibiotics, MRI scanners and DNA sequencing, the report suggests.
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Sir Robert Lechler, the academy鈥檚 president, said there was 鈥渋ncreasing evidence that shows that patients treated in research-active hospitals get better quality of care鈥.
鈥淧rotecting and strengthening research is a win-win situation for patients, the NHS, universities and our economy,鈥 added Sir Robert, provost and senior vice-president (health) at King鈥檚 College London.
Declaring that 鈥渞esearch is the tonic the NHS needs right now鈥, Sir Robert said that including research in medical roles would make it 鈥渆asier to attract and keep the best doctors鈥 because research could 鈥減rovide a coping mechanism to avoid burnout鈥.
The report, which was produced by a group of senior clinical academics after extensive consultation with health staff, calls on universities to increase the number of honorary positions they award to NHS staff as a way of improving links to hospital and health trusts.
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鈥淪uch appointments must enable healthcare professionals to fully engage in research by providing them with the same career development, mentoring, training and promotion opportunities as academic staff,鈥 the report advises, saying institutions should also offer 鈥渁ccess to the grant-making machinery and journal subscriptions hosted by the [institution] and opportunities for student supervision鈥.
Hospitals and other healthcare organisations should also 鈥渁ctively promote research, by valuing and measuring the health research they carry out鈥, it聽adds.
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