NO MEDICAL ADVICE - This is an NHS discussions subreddit, not a service to ask for, or give medical advice. Welcome to r/NHS, an un-affiliated community for NHS news, sharing information, and discussions.
Does anyone have any tips about writing the supporting information section for NHS jobs applications ? I have tried to meet the general specification of the jobs but never get to the interview stage I have been working for the NHS via a third party employer so have the relevant experience needed.
Because NHS is so different with each school, it's really not as big a factor in college decisions as you would think. I was in a really shitty school in rural Maryland, and the NHS was a joke there.
NO MEDICAL ADVICE - This is an NHS discussions subreddit, not a service to ask for, or give medical advice. Welcome to r/NHS, an un-affiliated community for NHS news, sharing information, and discussions.
(NHS) Every month for a while now i’ve been getting anywhere between £40-£120 extra in my payslip under the term “afc absence np” I work in an admin role for the NHS so I don’t get any different pay rates for night shifts or anything. Most months I do overtime but I haven’t for the last couple of months and i’ve still been getting ...
NO MEDICAL ADVICE - This is an NHS discussions subreddit, not a service to ask for, or give medical advice. Welcome to r/NHS, an un-affiliated community for NHS news, sharing information, and discussions.
NO MEDICAL ADVICE - This is an NHS discussions subreddit, not a service to ask for, or give medical advice. Welcome to r/NHS, an un-affiliated community for NHS news, sharing information, and discussions.
I’m a clinical staff and this is for my friend… I have suggested him the basics like, trust values, common interview questions regarding strength and weakness, IT skills and team working. He has also gone through the Person specification based questions and preparing according to that. Any other tips or advice you could give please? It’s a fixed term job and could really help him gain ...
As someone who doesn't work for the NHS, looking at jobs so many seem inaccessible due to being internal only for that trust. Is there a reason for this? It seems trusts are limiting the candidate pool which will surely result in a smaller number of qualified people applying.
If blood tests show up something sinister, would the GP inform you on the phone and then seek further tests from hospital or would they contact the hospital before telling you about your results on the phone?