A cancer patient was left distraught after her urgent operation this week was cancelled due to NHS strikes.
Monika Schiffer, from Bournemouth, was diagnosed with breast cancer in January this year and endured six rounds of chemotherapy to reduce the size of the tumours.
The 51-year-old was scheduled to undergo a double mastectomy — surgery to remove both breasts — yesterday.
But last month, just days after it was announced consultants and junior doctors would be taking to the picket lines in a coordinated walkout, the op was cancelled.
She told MailOnline today: ‘I think it’s a scandal that the NHS is allowed to strike. I would ban all emergency services — police, fire brigade and the NHS — [from taking industrial action]. They play with people’s lives.
Monika Schiffer was diagnosed with breast cancer on both sides earlier this year in January and endured six rounds of chemotherapy to reduce the size of the tumours. The 51-year-old from Bournemouth had been scheduled to undergo a double mastectomy on September 20. But last month, just days after it was announced consultants and junior doctors would be taking to the picket lines in a coordinated walkout, the surgery was cancelled
Consultants in England have taken to the picket lines on four separate days so far this summer, while junior doctors have staged 19 days of strike action this year. Both will return to the picket lines together on October, 2, 3 and 4. Radiographers are also set to join medics by walking out for 24 hours from 8am on October 3. The strike days also coincide with Rishi Sunak’s first Tory party conference as leader and prime minister
Ms Schiffer was diagnosed with breast cancer at the end of January.
Around 55,000 women and 400 men in the UK are told they have the cancer every year. Three-quarters survive for 10 years to more after it is spotted.
She underwent six rounds of chemotherapy — therapy to kill cancer cells — from March to August, as her tumours were inoperable due to their size.
Ms Schiffer said: ‘Neither my original surgeon or the one who operated me was happy about the strikes. They were brilliant.’
After her chemotherapy treatment ended however, her initial surgeon warned that she could see her operation cancelled and if it was ‘the next available appointment will be in weeks’, she said.
‘When I was then told the operation was cancelled my heart sank.
‘I was terrified that the cancer would start to grow and spread again.
‘I was confused, scared and angry at the same time. My mental health suffered.’
She was later offered an operation slot on September 8 at the Royal Bournemouth Hospital with a different surgeon and decided to take it.
While Ms Schiffer is now recovering following her surgery, there are concerns the results of her histology report — which provides details about her cancer based on the tissue removed during surgery — may also be delayed due to strike action.
She said: ‘The surgeon said it normally takes two weeks but this time it will take three to four weeks, or God knows how long. All due to the NHS strike.’
Ms Schiffer added: ‘When you live with cancer in your body you can’t wait weeks.
‘It could mean the difference between life or death.
‘I consider myself extremely lucky that a slot was offered for me for an earlier appointment.
‘Yesterday would have been my initial surgery date. I am feeling incredibly lucky because I don’t have to worry anymore.
‘But many haven’t been this lucky. And they might gravely suffer from the consequences of this action.’
For the first time in the health service’s 75-year history, junior and senior medics yesterday took coordinated strike action, leaving patients with ‘Christmas Day’ cover in hospitals, with emergency units staffed and a basic level of cover on wards.
Junior doctor strikes will continue until 7am on Saturday. But further joint action by both groups of medics are planned for October 2, 3 and 4.
Prior to this week’s walkouts, junior doctors had staged 19 days of strike action this year, with consultants taking to the picket lines on four separate days.
England’s backlog, for procedures like hip and knee replacements, now stands at 7.6million, official figures revealed last week. It means roughly one in seven people across the country are currently stuck in the system awaiting care. More than 380,000 patients have gone a year without being treated, often in agony
The BBC Freedom of Information request found a consultant at University Hospitals Plymouth was paid more than £3,000 to cover a 12-and-a-half-hour night shift, supposed to be covered by a junior doctor. The same hospital paid nearly £1.8m for cover — £1.59m to consultants — during the first three rounds of junior doctor industrial action alone. Pictured, NHS consultants and junior doctors outside University College hospital in London today
NHS bosses warned that the combined walkouts put patients at ‘the highest level of risk in living memory’, and affected ‘many more groups of patients who haven’t been disrupted by previous strikes’.
Many routine hospital appointments and treatments, including cancer care, have been postponed as a result of industrial action.
Senior leaders expect the official total of operations and appointments cancelled during strikes to exceed 1million, with 100,000 cancellations expected this week alone.
However, they have warned that the true picture is far worse, with few appointments with medics even being scheduled for strike days.
But patients have been urged to still attend appointments if they have not been told it is cancelled — as some doctors are still working.
Sir Stephen Powis, NHS England’s national medical director, confirmed yesterday that nearly 900,000 procedures have been disrupted due to industrial action and the figure ‘will certainly rise today and over the next few days’.
The BMA argues that medics have seen their pay eroded by 35 per cent over the last 15 years.
As a result, junior doctors have called for a full 35 per cent pay uplift, while consultants set their pay demand 11 per cent.
BMA junior doctor committee co-chairs Dr Rob Laurenson and Dr Vivek Trivedi yesterday said: ‘Junior doctors in England do not want to strike but we will, and we will do so for as long as it takes for this Government to get back round the table and give us a credible offer to bring an end to the strikes.’
They added: ‘The Prime Minister’s latest offer is still a real terms pay cut, amounting to a doctor being paid just over £15 per hour when starting work and still sees junior doctors around 26 per cent worse off than in 2008.’
In July, consultants and junior doctors were given a six per cent pay rise under No. 10’s pay offer.
At the time, Rishi Sunak said the deal, announced in July for 2023/24, was the Government’s ‘final offer’.
Nurses, paramedics and other NHS staff received a five per cent rise and ‘NHS backlog bonus’.
The BMA however immediately rejected the rise, vowing to crack on with strike action.
Yesterday, the union also announced that specialist, associate specialist and specialty (SAS) doctors will hold an indicative ballot for industrial action.
These doctors work alongside junior doctors and consultants in hospitals, but some also work in the community.