Deaneries ruling is good news for juniors
2008 Aug 22, Francesca Robinson
Junior doctors may be able to take action against their deaneries if they do not receive adequate information about their posts, following a ruling that deaneries are employment agencies.
The clarification about the status of deaneries has been obtained by the BMA’s legal department from the Employment Agency Standards Inspectorate (EASI), the body entrusted with regulation of employment agencies.
EASI has stated that the postgraduate medical deaneries appear to be employment agencies and as such would be required to comply with the requirements of the Employment Agencies Act 1973 and the Conduct of Employment Agencies and Employment Businesses Regulations 2003.
The BMA has reported all the deaneries in England to EASI for not meeting these requirements in the past.
The association will now be pressing to ensure that EASI carries out its statutory function to ensure deaneries provide accurate information to junior doctors when they offer them a post, such as when and where they will start, what hours they will be working and how much they will be paid.
Mr Ram Moorthy, Chairman of the BMA’s Junior Doctors Committee, said: ‘Unlike most professions, junior doctors can start a job without knowing how much they will be paid. It is about time deaneries are required to comply with the same regulations that apply to other employment agencies.
‘We hope that EASI will now take the necessary steps to regulate deaneries in the same way it currently treats other employment agencies.
‘It is a scandal that deaneries have been able to give junior doctors so little information about their jobs. The BMA intends to pursue this matter as it is clear that EASI has an obligation to use its regulatory muscle to ensure deaneries provide accurate information to juniors so that they can make informed decisions about each step on their career ladder.’
Mr Moorthy said that the EASI clarification meant that some junior doctors may now be in a position to take legal action against their deanery if they lost out or suffered because they did not have access to the necessary information throughout a training rotation.
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