Publication, Part of NHS Vacancy Statistics (and previous NHS Vacancies Survey)
NHS Vacancy Statistics England April 2015 – March 2022 Experimental Statistics
Experimental statistics, Official statistics
Summary
This is the latest compendium publication in the NHS Vacancy Statistics series containing vacancy related data for the NHS which provide four different views on recruitment information for the NHS.
Data from NHS Jobs, the Electronic Staff Record (ESR) and Trac Recruitment Management Software (Trac) provide a range of proxy data sources for NHS vacancies. The series also includes management information related to vacancies within the NHS which have been collected by NHS England and NHS Improvement (NHSE&I).
Users should note these data do not indicate how much of the reported substantive gap is filled by temporary staff.
Due to the complex nature of how NHS vacancy data is defined and collected, all data sources should be treated with a degree of caution.
We have included a data visualisation resource for the first time within this edition of the publication. It is designed to give users immediate insight into different outcomes at Regional aggregations and can be found below the Key Facts. As with all elements of the publication, we welcome feedback on this as we continue to investigate ways of gaining maximum value from the data.
To help with the development of this publication, feedback can be sent to: [email protected] with the subject heading ‘NHS Vacancy Statistics publication feedback’.
Key Facts
Data from NHS England and NHS Improvement
show a vacancy rate of 10.0% as at 31 March 2022 within the Registered Nursing staff group (38,972 vacancies). This is a slight increase from the same period the previous year when the vacancy rate was 9.2% (34,678 vacancies).
NHS Jobs data
NHS Jobs is transitioning users to the new NHS Jobs service and an increasing number of Trusts are now using that to advertise their vacancies. Until a data flow has been established from the new service, we are unable to quantify the number of vacancies being advertised on it. Users of the data should be aware that affected Trusts may appear to show lower levels of vacancies than reported in the past. National and local totals are also affected.
During the COVID-19 pandemic
there was considerable disruption to recruitment activity within the NHS. This was apparent from the lower reported advertised vacancies between March and June 2020 as the NHS was fully focused on dealing with the first wave of the pandemic.
Resources
Last edited: 26 May 2022 10:03 am