According to Rishi Sunak, the NHS is about to experience the "largest expansion in training and workforce" in its history.
According to the prime minister, the plans would lessen "reliance on healthcare professionals with foreign training.".
It does so at a time when junior doctors are planning a five-day strike next month and NHS waiting lists are at an all-time high.
Next week's publication of the complete plans is anticipated.
He predicted that the NHS Long Term Workforce plan would take place over a period of 15 years in a piece for the Sunday Times.
Artificial intelligence technology and "innovations like virtual wards," he claimed, would be used.
To fill staffing gaps in the NHS in England, the new package of measures may include the introduction of apprentice doctor positions.
It would imply that students who have finished high school could enroll in medical school without having to pay for it.
Additionally, the existing nurse apprenticeship program will be expanded as part of the plan.
The plans, he claimed on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg program, "mean people can have confidence that the doctors and nurses and general practitioners that we all need will be there.".
In order to provide the care that we all require, the NHS will be able to hire physicians, nurses, and general practitioners thanks to the "long-term workforce plan," according to Mr. Sunak.
When pressed about how long it would take to see the effects of the changes, he acknowledged that it could take "five, ten, or fifteen years for these things to come through," but that did not mean it was not the right thing to do.
One of the prime minister's five pledges, which were made public at the beginning of the year, is to decrease wait times in the NHS.
The number of patients in England waiting for consultant-led elective care increased to 7.4 million in the first half of this year from 7.2 million in January.
At the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020, there were approximately 4 point 4 million people in the UK on an NHS waiting list.
When Mr. Sunak was unable to reach a pay agreement that would prevent the junior doctors' strike, the BBC pressured him.
Between 13 and 18, the BMA union is holding its longest-ever strike in opposition to pay. A pay raise of 5% was rejected because it wasn't "credible," according to the company.
He claimed to have agreements with "over half a dozen NHS unions" and to have the responsibility of "making difficult decisions as prime minister.".
He declared, "When it comes to public sector pay, I'm going to do what I think is reasonable and affordable."