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Red wall Tory MPs put pressure on Sunak over net migration

Group issues 12-point plan calling for stricter immigration rules for care workers, students and refugees

Rishi Sunak is facing demands from โ€œred wallโ€ Conservative MPs to slash the number of overseas care workers, foreign students and refugees allowed into the UK in time for the next election.

The MPs from the 2017 and 2019 intake, who call themselves the New Conservatives, have issued a 12-point plan to cut net migration to Britain from 606,000 to 226,000 before the end of 2024.

A cap of 20,000 on the number of refugees accepted for resettlement in the UK.

Caps on future humanitarian schemes such as the Ukraine, Afghanistan and Hong Kong schemes should the predicted 168,000 reductions not be realised.

Implementation of the provisions of the illegal migration bill, which it is claimed would lead to a reduction of at least 35,000 from LTIM.

A raise in the minimum combined income threshold to ยฃ26,200 for sponsoring a spouse and raising the minimum language requirement to B1 (intermediate level). This should lead to an estimated 20,000 reduction in LTIM, the MPs claim.

Making the migration advisory committee report on the effect of migration on housing and public services, not just the jobs market, by putting future demand on a par with labour requirements in all studies.

A 5% cap on the amount of social housing that councils can give to non-UK nationals.

Raising the immigration health surcharge to ยฃ2,700 per person a year.

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Does our preoccupation with resilience mean we must tolerate the morally intolerable?

By Rebecca Farrington, Louise Tomkow, Gabrielle Prager, and Kitty Worthing.

Healthcare professionals are increasingly expected to be hardy and โ€˜suck it upโ€™ to survive in complex and demoralising workplaces. As NHS clinicians, we saw staffing shortages and limited resources firsthand during the COVID-19 pandemic. These experiences magnified our scepticism about the onus on us, as individuals, to be โ€˜resilientโ€™ as a solution to both the workforce crisis and wider societal problems.

Our paper โ€˜In critique of moral resilienceโ€™ describes the responses of NHS staff faced with navigating COVID-19 and caring for one of the most disadvantaged groups in our society โ€“ people seeking asylum housed in contingency accommodation. The staff we interviewed provided a social commentary on the state-sponsored neglect of vulnerable migrants in the UK. We donโ€™t overlook this, but we focus on healthcare professionalsโ€™ understanding, responses and negotiation of their roles in this โ€˜Hostile Environmentโ€™.

Resilience was clearly important to staff for self-preservation, but so was an ability to see the limits of a biomedical approach to social suffering. The concept of moral resilience helped to unpick this but was not enough to describe the ideological changes and challenges to systems made by staff using their new insights. They did put up with the difficult bits of their work, and we describe how they survived. However, these coping actions alone did nothing to change the status quo in the political and social systems causing the underlying health problems. Some staff we interviewed made positive changes in the lives of the people seeking asylum through activism to improve their health and wellbeing. We found that the concept of resilience failed to capture these important moral actions: advocating beyond the clinic, beyond just doing their best on the job.

The popular focus on resilience is here to stay in much of our work and home lives, but we encourage caution in using it as a broad-brush solution to complex problems. Healthcare providers who see and yet continue morally problematic care in the name of resilience might be thought of as complicit in social suffering. Does moral resilience just promote acceptance of the status quo, even when it feels unbearable? What cost does this fixation on resilience bring to both care providers and patients?

Reflecting on our work in clinical medicine, research, and medical advocacy, we recognise that some of our most effective improvements to social conditions have been through collective action and joint resistance. In times of increasing moral outrage, such as against the UK governmentโ€™s illegal migration bill, this feels a more appropriate response than just sucking it up in the name of resilience in the hope that we will survive.

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Paper: In critique of moral resilience: UK healthcare professionalsโ€™ experiences working with asylum applicants housed in contingency accommodation during the COVID-19 pandemic

Authors: Louise Tomkow1, Gabrielle Prager1, Kitty Worthing2, Rebecca Farrington1

Affiliations:

1. Faculty Biology, Medicine and Health,ย The University of Manchester,ย Manchester, UK
2. Sheffield Childrenโ€™s Hospital,ย Sheffield, UK
Competing interests: None declared.

The post Does our preoccupation with resilience mean we must tolerate the morally intolerable? appeared first on Journal of Medical Ethics blog.

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