Junior doctors in England stage 72-hour walkout

Junior doctors in England stage 72-hour walkout

Hospital doctors in England begin a new 72-hour strike over pay on Wednesday, demanding restoration of pay to 2008-2009 levels.

The British Medical Association’s Junior Doctors Committee say medics have seen a 26 per cent pay cut in real terms in the last 15 years, as salaries have failed to keep pace with soaring inflation.

They want pay restored to 2008-2009 levels but the government says that would mean an average pay award of about 35 per cent this year and is too costly.

The move of doctors invited prompt warnings from health officials of huge disruption to patients and services.

The latest walk-out by junior doctors — those below consultant level — starts at 7:00 am and is set to last until Saturday.

It is the latest strike in the state-funded National Health Service (NHS), which has also seen nurses and other medical staff picket for more pay.

The BMA warned that while it was open to further talks, it would stage further strikes in the coming months if the government sticks to its five per cent offer.

On Tuesday, NHS England’s national medical director, Stephen Powis, warned that most routine or pre-planned care could be affected.

A similar walk-out in April saw 196,000 hospital appointments and operations rescheduled.

“It (the strike) will have an enormous impact on routine care for patients and on the waiting list, as procedures can take time to rearrange with multiple teams involved,” he said.

Priority will be given to emergency, urgent and critical care, he added.

Hospital bosses have called for both sides to give ground, as they battle huge backlogs in treatment exacerbated by the Covid pandemic.

Some seven million people were waiting for treatment in April — a record — with nearly three million waiting more than 18 months, according to the BMA.

The length of time for patients waiting for their first appointments and treatment for cancer was also getting worse, it added.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay called the strikes “extremely disappointing” and said it put patients and work to cut waiting lists at risk.

“If the BMA cancels these damaging and disruptive strikes and shows a willingness to move significantly from their position, we can resume confidential talks and find a way forward, as we have done with other unions,” he added.

Junior doctors in Scotland on Tuesday rejected what the Scottish Government in Edinburgh called its “final” pay offer of a 14.5 per cent increase over two years.

BMA Scotland said its members would strike from July 12-15.

Health policy is a devolved matter for the governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, with the UK government in London overseeing England.

UK annual inflation slowed to a 13-month low in April but remains elevated at 8.7 per cent as soaring food prices offset weaker energy costs. Official data for May is due next week.

With inputs from agencies

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