NHS urges doctors to delay retirement to help with backlog
A letter to trusts asked for retiring and recently retired doctors to be urged to continue working part-time or from home in virtual wards.

Retiring doctors have been urged by NHS England to continue to work to help clear the countryās health backlogs.
In a letter to hospital trusts, NHS urged for retiring and recently retired doctors to be asked to continue working part-time or from home in virtual wards.
The letter, seen by the PA news agency, also suggested they could help by training junior doctors.
According to the General Medical Council there are 21,000 doctors due to retire in September. NHS has estimated it has a staff shortage of around 110,000.
Stella Vig, the NHSās national clinical director of elective care, said NHS staff had almost halved the amount of people waiting more than two years for treatment in the past two months.
But, she added: āWe know there is still a long way to go.ā
So we are urging those nearing retirement or those who have recently retired to consider staying on to educate and train the next generation of doctors and nurses, as well as the wider NHS.
āSo we are urging those nearing retirement or those who have recently retired to consider staying on to educate and train the next generation of doctors and nurses, as well as the wider NHS ā freeing current staff to do more procedures as well as developing the future workforce so the NHS can treat even more patients.ā
The letter told trusts that āenhancing and expanding the capacity of our workforceā was essential to clearing the Covid backlog.
It also instructed trusts to ācreate options for all staffā to increase their contracted hours.