LONDON, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- Up to one-third of Britain's family doctors, the backbone of the National Health Service (NHS), may consider leaving direct patient care within five years, mainly due to burnout and job dissatisfaction, according to a University of Manchester study on Tuesday.
The research, published in Frontiers in Public Health and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research's School of Primary Care Research and the Greater Manchester Patient Safety Research Collaboration, is the first to identify how General Practitioners (GPs) in England are becoming less engaged with their work, often leading to decisions to quit patient care.
