Junior doctors across England are beginning a four-day strike that will result in an estimated 250,000 appointments including operations being cancelled.
Doctors will mount picket lines outside hospitals from 7am until Saturday morning in a deteriorating dispute over pay. It is the longest industrial action in the health service since nurses, ambulance crews and other health workers took action last year.
NHS managers have said patient care is “on a knife-edge” because of the stoppage by members of the British Medical Association (BMA). The chief executive of the NHS Confederation, Matthew Taylor, said the likely impact of the strike was “heartbreaking” and called on both sides to end their “battle of rhetoric”.
Taylor told the BBC there was no question this strike would be more disruptive than the 72-hour stoppages by NHS staff last month, which led to 175,000 cancelled appointments.
The shadow health secretary, Wes Streeting, said: “The junior doctors’ strike this week will cause huge disruption to patient care. Where is the prime minister and why hasn’t he tried to stop it?
“Rishi Sunak says he wouldn’t want to get in the middle of NHS pay disputes. Patients are crying out for leadership but instead they are getting weakness.”
New advertisements by the BMA show how much junior doctors are paid for their roles in surgical procedures. Three doctors with 10, seven and one year’s experience are pictured in an operating theatre where an appendix is being removed, one of thousands of similar operations that takes place every day in England.
For the 60-minute procedure, they would be paid £28, £24.46 and £14.09 respectively, a total of £66.55 for a potentially life-saving procedure, says the BMA. The union has estimated that the pay of junior doctors has fallen by 26% in real terms over the past 15 years.
Dr Robert Laurenson and Dr Vivek Trivedi, the BMA junior doctors committee co-chairs, said: “It is appalling that this government feels that paying three junior doctors as little as £66.55 between them for work of this value is justified. This is highly skilled work requiring years of study and intensive training in a high-pressure environment where the job can be a matter of life and death.
“Why then has the government allowed junior doctor pay to be cut in real terms by over a quarter in the last 15 years?”
The health secretary, Steve Barclay, called the strikes “extremely disappointing” and said the BMA’s demand for a 35% pay rise was unreasonable as it would result in some junior doctors receiving a pay rise of more than £20,000.
He said: “People should attend appointments unless told otherwise by the NHS, continue to call 999 in a life-threatening emergency and use NHS 111 online services for non-urgent health needs.”