ARTICLE AD BOX
By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent
A 5% pay rise from April has been offered to NHS staff in England, including nurses and ambulance workers.
In addition, staff have been offered a one-off payment of at least £1,655 to top up the past year's pay award.
Unions are recommending members back the deal after nearly two weeks of talks with ministers, raising hopes the bitter dispute may be coming to an end.
The offer covers all NHS staff except doctors, who are on a different contract.
Fourteen unions were represented at the talks covering nurses, ambulance staff, physios, midwives and support staff, including cleaners and porters.
The biggest three - the Royal College of Nursing, Unison and the GMB - have all said they are backing the deal.
Unite has said it cannot recommend it to members, but it will put it out to vote.
It comes after a winter of industrial action which has seen nurses, ambulance staff and physios all go on strike.
The unions put further action on hold after the two sides agreed to enter discussions last month.
NHS staff have seen a pay rise by an average of 4.75% this year - with the lowest paid getting the biggest rises.
The one-off payment starts at £1,655 for the lowest paid staff such as cleaners and porters and rises to just over £2,400 for the most senior frontline roles, such as nurse consultants.
An offer of 3.5% from April had been suggested originally by the government, but during the talks ministers agreed to increase this to 5%. The lowest paid will get even more.