Senior doctors back strike action in England

1 year ago 44
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NHS hospital wardImage source, PA Media

By Nick Triggle

Health correspondent

NHS consultants in England have voted in favour of strike action in their fight to get more pay.

Some 86% of British Medical Association members backed walkouts over what the union described as repeated pay cuts.

The union had already announced a 48-hour walkout on 20 and 21 July would take place if doctors backed action.

It follows a five-day strike by junior doctors - the combination of which is likely to lead to huge disruption to services and cancelled treatments.

The walkout by junior doctors across all services ends of 18 July.

Consultants will be providing what is being described as Christmas Day cover during their own strike - so emergency care will be provided along with a very limited amount of routine work.

BMA consultants committee chair Dr Vishal Sharma said the vote showed how "furious" they were at being repeatedly devalued by the government.

"Consultants don't want to have to take industrial action, but have been left with no option in the face of a government that continues to cut our pay year after year."

But he said it was not too late to avert strike action and urged the government to come forward with a credible offer.

No pay offer

Consultant pay has fallen by 27% since 2008 once RPI inflation is taken into account, but the BMA said once changes to tax and pension contributions were factored in the cut to take-home pay was 35%.

A major factor in this is the fact income tax thresholds have been frozen and the introduction of the additional 45% tax rate for the highest earners.

During 2022, average NHS earnings exceeded £126,000 for consultants - this includes extra pay for additional hours and performance.

Unlike the junior doctors, consultants are not asking for full pay restoration in one go.

Instead, they want to see the government to start at least giving pay rises that match inflation.

Last year they received a 4.5% pay increase - less than half the rate of RPI inflation in the 12 months to March.

No formal pay offer has been made for this year yet.

Meanwhile, a ballot by the Royal College of Nursing failed to achieve a high enough turnout to give the union a mandate to continue its strike action.

That result - also announced on Tuesday - means the long-running dispute with nurses now comes to an end.

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