How we broke the story

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How we broke the story

Last Updated: 1:42am BST 16/05/2007

MARCH 2: The Daily Telegraph reveals that thousands of junior doctors have been left without jobs because the new online recruitment system has gone "disastrously wrong"

MARCH 3: Many junior doctors and their parents contact The Daily Telegraph with details of the chaos that has engulfed the Medical Training Application Service (MTAS)

MARCH 5: Patricia Hewitt, the Health Secretary, meets the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges. In the West Midlands, senior surgeons put their jobs on the line by suspending interviews

MARCH 6: Miss Hewitt announces an immediate review of MTAS

MARCH 9: The Department of Health agrees to give hundreds of doctors who failed to get an interview in the first round of applications a second chance

MARCH 17: Junior doctors stage mass demonstrations to vent their anger about the difficulties crippling the recruitment process

MARCH 19: Miss Hewitt tells MPs the problems with MTAS have created a "high degree of insecurity" for doctors but refuses to apologise

MARCH 23: Around 11,000 junior doctors are offered at least one interview and a guarantee that their CVs will be taken into account

MARCH 30: Prof Alan Crockard, the eminent neurosurgeon who presided over the new system, announces his resignation

APRIL 3: Miss Hewitt finally apologises to junior doctors during a BBC interview for the "terrible anxiety" the problems with MTAS have caused

APRIL 17: She apologises in the Commons for the chaos in the MTAS system

APRIL 25: Channel Four News reveals that security breaches in the MTAS website allow people to access information about junior doctors, including their addresses and sexuality

APRIL 26: A second security breach is exposed which means people can look through applications submitted by junior doctors. The Department of Health announces that MTAS has been suspended

MAY 4: Miss Hewitt looks rattled as she faces the fury of junior doctors during an appearance on BBC1's Newsnight programme

MAY 15: Miss Hewitt announces that MTAS has been abandoned. Junior doctors in the second round of recruitment will be asked to write directly to hospitals

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