Britain’s Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) launched a new exhibition on Thursday that pays tribute to the role played by doctors migrated from South Asian countries like Bangladesh in filling the gap of family doctors over the years in remote areas of the United Kingdom.
“Migrants Who Made the NHS” is a celebration of thousands of doctors who came from South Asia to keep the UK’s state-funded National Health Service (NHS) afloat by working as general practitioners (GP) in some of the most deprived and remote areas of the country between the 1940s and 1980s.
"General practice in the UK would not be what it is today without the hard work, innovation, and courage of our predecessors, and their dedication to delivering high-quality patient care. Indeed, without them, our profession and the NHS might not even exist at all,” said Professor Mayur Lakhani, President of RCGP.
“Not only were they doctors, but they became highly-valued members of the communities in which they practiced. Whilst many faced incredible challenges, our exhibition also documents the overwhelmingly positive and lifelong relationships they forged with their patients,” he said.
The exhibition, held at the headquarters of RCGP in central London, marks the 70th anniversary of the NHS and comes at a time when there is growing debate around its future staffing and funding needs.
Based on the book “Migrant architects of the NHS: South Asian doctors and the reinvention of British general practice (1940s-1980s)” by Dr Julian M Simpson, the new exhibition draws on archival research, photographs and oral history interviews with 40 GPs who moved to Britain from South Asia during that period, including some who are still practicing today.
"It's important to also remember that the National Health Service was established to make healthcare accessible to those who could not afford it. And for millions of people, particularly in working-class communities across Britain, accessing that care meant going to see a GP from the Indian subcontinent,” said Simpson.
"Medical practicioners from the Indian sub-continent were therefore not just contributing to the NHS, they were its very lifeblood. We should acknowledge they were amongst the architects of the NHS," he notes.By the 1980s, around 16% of GPs working in the NHS had been born in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh or Sri Lanka. They were responsible for delivering patient care to around a sixth of the British population. In some areas they made up more than half of the GP population.
"The NHS evolved during its first four decades into a system based around general practice and primary care. By becoming family doctors, South Asian doctors prevented a GP recruitment crisis. Through their work, they shaped the field as it transformed itself into the cornerstone of the British healthcare system,” Simpson explains.


