Doctors
Posts in category Doctors
For now the Christmas wind down has started and festive cheer is in the air. Thank you to all at Cpl Healthcare especially the Nursing Team who have supported me throughout my first year and Happy Christmas to you all. One successful year done and hopefully many more to come.....here’s to the New Year!
Tags: Cpl, world, Year, Healthcare, task, candidate, Anniversary, Christmas, recruitment, canâ, base, sourcing, nursing
I’d just like to wish you all a very Happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year. The Cpl team in the Galway are heading out this evening for a meal in the lovely Townhouse Bar and Restaurant in the Spanish Arch area of the city. The Christmas feel is starting to creep its way into our office, and everyone is aglow with its touch.
Our team of recruiters are still very busy, preparing for one of the busiest months in our industry – January. The New Year brings in New Year Resolutions and, for many, it’s to move jobs, change career paths, or to seek work for the first time.
Tags: internal promotions, expression of interest, cv advice, new beginnings, niche recruitment, spanish arch, looking for a new job, new year resolutions, happy christmas, prosperous new year, market trends, catriona kelly, career prospects, hassle free service, job search, initial expression, reputable agency, career paths, jobs in ireland, Year, recruitment agencies
Emergency Medicine
This week I had a really nice trip to Leitrim The team there have tasked me with joining them to find a Registrar and SHO with Emergency Medicine experience to join the frontline fight against illness, disease and injury in our country’s accident and emergency departments.
If the beautiful scenery wasn’t enough to entice experienced Emergency Medicine Doctors, we have devised a generous relocation package including one of the best salaries in Europe, contribution towards flights and accommodation and a refund of Irish Medical Council Registration costs.
Tags: accident and emergency, national recruitment, would like more information, council registration, nice trip, weekend getaway, irish medical council, manorhamilton, recruitment services, service executive, s hospital, medicine doctors, beautiful scenery, essential service, relocation package, working in ireland, emergency departments, emergency medicine, registration costs, specialist training
I love to receive CVs, which are clear, concise and straight to the point. It’s so important to keep your CV down to one or two pages, and ensure the formatting is consistent and comprehensible. I would recommend that you use either Times New Roman or Arial Font, size 11-12, and tab to space correctly....Never use the spacebar! Recruiters work very hard to find candidates who fulfil their clients’ exact requirements, so your CV is the most important tool you’ll use in your search for the perfect job. Do not let it let you down.
Tags: administrative burden, spacebar, catriona kelly, recruitment consultants, executive principal, recruiter, facebook catriona, arial font, new opportunities, times new roman, job search, cvs, healthcare industry, suitable candidates, roman or arial, exact requirements, selection criteria, job offers, linkedin, straight to the point
Now we all know the prospect of meeting with your line manager to discuss career progression and enhanced pay/benefits packages can be very daunting particularly in this current climate, please find below a couple of snippets of advice to help you brooch the subject.
I enjoy recruiting for positions I have not come across before and in finding those unique Doctors who are the missing piece in my jigsaw. At the moment I am recruiting for 2 unusual roles that have piqued my interest;
Doctor – Medical Services – Insurance - Dublin, Ireland.
Consultant Immunologist with a subspecialty in Immunopathology – Wellington, New Zealand. (6 month contract)
Tags: Average, General Practice, Doctor, insurance companies, missing piece, immunologist, clinic, medical person, medical system, person, doctor medical, Medical, medical claims, dublin ireland, good understanding, medical services department, immunopathology, medical council, Medicine, medical professionals, international medical evacuations, leading insurance, medical recruiter, coat, hospital, wellington new zealand, vacanc, subspecialty, suitable candidates, stethoscope, public
There is quite a shortage of Psychiatric Doctors in Ireland.Personally, I think working in Mental Health in Ireland is a great opportunity for overseas Doctors. Mental Health is the one sector where culture and surroundings have a big impact on the service users.
I’m interested to hear from any Psychiatric Doctors out there with their recommendations on what countries to source suitable Doctors from. So today’s mission is to make a different to Ireland’s Mental Health Services!
Tags: act 2001, overseas doctors, amp, Psychiatric, Health, Mental, moment, mental health act, nbsp, discipline, mental health services, surroundings, doctors in ireland, health service, different perspective, psychiatry, service users, Ireland, shortage, adolescent mental health, house officer, hospital doctor
Ireland’s first online medical directory will be launched in Dublin Monday 6th of December 2010.
The directory which is targeted at busy GP Healthcare Professionals is free to use. Its aim is to help doctors in general practice, by improving the scope of information available during a consultation and ultimately saving time in making assessments etc. This website is funded by the revenue advertising sales generate.
I hope it’s a successful initiative for its founders Dr. Darach Ó Ciardha and Dr Shane McKeogh.
Visit www.gpbuddy.ie for more info.
Tags: Doctor, Nurse, Clinic, Practice Nurse, GP
Athens…..it’s an extremely compact city; it has enough grit, weirdness and bustle to give it that urban vibe which you don’t seem to have in Dublin. But like many other visitors to Athens, I am travelling not knowing the full extent of the country’s economic problems.
My colleague and I are travelling to Athens with one goal…a mission you could call it, to find Doctors that are willing to come and work in Ireland.
In case you have been living under a rock in past few years you will know that Ireland has a severe shortage of NCHD’s (Junior Doctors), as a result of this we have had to source Doctors from countries all over Europe.
Most recently our European counterparts Greece have been through harsh economic times. So much so that the IMF came knocking on their door in early May, or should I say Greece knocked on the door of the IMF. A bailout package was agreed to the tune of €30 Billion, a figure would be beyond comprehension in third world countries. Unemployment is currently tethering around the 12% mark, a figure which is in actual fact lower than that of the Republic of Ireland but still dangerously high.
So what effect does the introduction of the IMF have on Doctors and the health system in Greece? Well the feeling I got by speaking to Greek Doctors is that they are extremely fed up, un-happy and vexed by the situation. This is a feeling that is present across the whole country which is evident in the protests that are constantly taking place in the capital and also the armed riot police that man every street corner prepared for the worst. In effect the country has temporarily given up its sovereignty and handed it to the IMF, they are now running the show and as a result the Health System is suffering. This is a route that Ireland must not look at going down but in the end the people may have no say in the matter.
As we spoke to more Doctors the real seriousness of the situation became apparent, Doctors aren’t getting paid on time and when they do they aren’t receiving the right amount.
One particular Doctor I spoke to had been working as a Junior Doctor in Cardiology within a public hospital in Athens. He proceeded to tell me how he had not been paid for nearly 4 weeks, his salary had been dramatically cut in the space of one year to roughly €400 per week and that the conditions within the hospital had deteriorated due to extreme cuts in public sector spending, the government passed a budget agreeing to €8 Billion worth of cuts in 14 months.
The consensus amongst all the Doctors we met in Greece was that they feared that hospitals would close down and there would be a mass exodus of Doctors from the country. The majority of Doctors we met wished to leave so that they could provide a better future for their family.
The question is can Ireland benefit from the current unrest amongst Medical Professionals in Greece?? What I’ve concluded is that as long as the IMF is running Greece we have a good chance.
Tags: Economy, Surgery, Padraig, HSE, Ireland, NCHD, Doctors, Jobs, Greece, Slattery, Medical, Blog
With the shutdown of A&E and acute services in Navan general, shortly after the closure of acute services in Monaghan, what is happening to the North East? The question has to be asked, why is that region constantly in the press? Could it be similar to the Northside/ Southside bias that was in the IMT a fortnight ago, whereby Beaumont Hospital believes there is a “disparity” between the way the HSE allocates funding. Does this carry through to other HSE regions as well?
Seemingly not; an article published recently in the Irish times suggests that regardless of the region, services are being cut and bed closures are occurring across the board.
Why is this do you reckon? Could it have anything to do with the hospitals decreased budget for the year; resulting in the closure of beds. Less beds equals less patients, it’s more like less beds equals more trolleys!
So while budget cuts have been made the number of admissions haven’t decreased. Services including GP’s and GP out of hour’s services are not being fully utilised. Are we using A&E departments as our own personal GP, considering there is a massive shortage for the next rotation which we are currently trying to fill in partnership with the HSE. Perhaps all of this is something one could consider before joining the Emergency Department queue.
Tags: Ireland, budget, cuts, HSE, cplhealthcare, cpl, rotations, NCHDs, locum, hospitals, doctors, medical