Striking junior doctors were today accused of running a ‘politically-motivated’ campaign aimed at bringing down the Government.
The British Medical Association (BMA) welcomed a pay offer from the Scottish government last month and is balloting its members on the package north of the border.
But Dr Robert Laurenson, co-chair of the BMA’s junior doctors committee, sparked fury by signalling he would not agree the same deal with the ‘ideological’ Tories in Westminster.
Junior doctors, seeking a salary hike of 35 per cent, today began their fifth round of strike action in the ongoing dispute, walking out for four days.
But a senior health boss today also claimed the action has cost the NHS around £1billion this year alone.
In the 16 days medics have taken to the picket lines, cover for absent staff and making up for lost appointments has seen the health service’s bills spiral.
In the 16 days medics have taken to the picket lines, cover for absent staff and making up lost appointments has seen the health service’s bills spiral. Junior doctors, seeking a salary hike of 35 per cent, today began their fifth round of strike action this morning in the ongoing dispute, walking out for four days
The British Medical Association (BMA) welcomed a pay offer from the Scottish government last month and is balloting its members on the package north of the border. But Dr Robert Laurenson, co-chair of the BMA’s junior doctors committee, today sparked fury by signalling he would not agree the same deal with the ‘ideological’ Tories in Westminster
More than 700,000 NHS appointments have been cancelled since strikes began seven months ago. In the latest five-day walkout by junior doctors, more than 100,000 were called off
Health secretary Steve Barclay has accused the union of being ‘reckless’ for pressing on with industrial and warned the strikes ‘serve only to harm patients’.
But speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme this morning, Dr Laurenson said the BMA would not accept the same deal that has ended junior doctor strikes in Scotland ‘because the governments are very different’.
The SNP Government last month offered a 14.5 per cent pay increase for junior doctors and doctors in training over two years.
Dr Laurenson added: ‘So the Scottish Government, there’s a basis to work forwards and have a relationship and a working relationship to negotiate in the future.
‘The government that we have today are hell bent on using the rigged, Independent Pay Review bodies.’
The presenter responded: ‘If I may say so, to a patient who is not able to go to hospital today, who has had something cancelled, who’s desperately worried, possibly in pain, it really does sound ideological the reasons why you won’t do the kind of deal with the government, with the Westminster Government, that they seem to be willing to do in Scotland.’
Dr Laurenson replied: ‘So I think what’s ideological is the government cutting our pay for fifteen consecutive years.’
A source close to Mr Barclay, who has insisted the pay award is ‘final’, said: ‘This is a clear admission from the BMA junior doctors leadership that their strikes are part of a politically-motivated campaign aimed at bringing down the government.
‘This industrial action is not in the interests of ordinary doctors in training or of patients.
‘We are delivering a fair pay award averaging 8.8 per cent for doctors in training with 10.3 per cent for the lowest earners.
‘The BMA should end their strikes immediately.’
It comes as Sir Julian Hartley, chief executive of NHS Providers, today claimed the strikes by medics have cost in excess of £1 billion.
Also speaking to the Today Programme this morning, Sir Hartley said: ‘Every strike costs a huge amount to the NHS.
‘So far, we estimate strikes have cost the NHS around a billion pounds and of course, that is the consequence of having to pay premium rates to consultants to cover junior doctors, the lost income from all of the activity that doesn’t go ahead.’
He added: ‘The costs are huge and of course, the impact on morale, you know, this is really important in terms of the NHS is all about its people, all about delivering for patients.’
A board meeting update from Julian Kelly, the NHS chief financial officer, published by the health service states that industrial action in April alone cost the health service £360million.
Of this, the five-day junior doctors’ strike account for £315million, The Telegraph reported.
Mr Kelly said a third of the spending was ‘down to the direct net cost of effectively paying more senior staff to cover junior staff who have gone on strike, who you are paying at premium rates’, according to the newspaper.
Another third could be attributed to ‘lost activity’ – cancelled operations and appointments – which will have to be rescheduled, he said.
As with previous walkouts among the medics, consultants providing cover are being paid up to £2,000 a day – and £5,000 for a 24-hour shift – after the BMA asked for ‘eye-watering’ rates for medics with average NHS earnings of around £134,000 a year.
Some of those taking to the picket line only started working for the NHS nine days ago, having newly graduated.
Health secretary Steve Barclay has accused the union of being ‘reckless’ for pressing on with industrial and warned the strikes ‘serve only to harm patients’. Writing in the Daily Mail today he said the union’s threat to continue striking indefinitely was pointless and ‘particularly concerning’ in the run-up to winter, when the NHS comes under more pressure
England’s backlog, for procedures like hip and knee replacements, now stands at 7.6million, official figures revealed yesterday. 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
Junior doctors, seeking a salary hike of 35 per cent, this morning began their fifth strike in the ongoing dispute, walking out for four days from 7am. Consultants, who earn in excess of £100,000, on average, will take to their own 48-hour picket line from August 24. Further action is planned for September if the Government ‘refuses to agree to pay talks’. Pictured, junior doctors on the picket line outside St Thomas’s Hospital in London this morning
The waiting list rose over 100,000 in June after a three-day strike by junior doctors led to 106,000 appointments and procedures being cancelled. Pictured, BMA junior doctors outside St Thomas’s Hospital in London this morning
The action also comes despite junior doctors being given a six per cent pay rise and a £1,250 lump sum under No. 10’s pay offer.
Rishi Sunak said the deal, announced last month 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’.
It means from 2023/24 junior doctors will earn from £32,000 and up to £63,000, for the most senior.
The BMA however immediately rejected the rise vowing to crack on with strike action.
Its original wave of strike action was sparked by an ‘insulting’ two per cent offer for the previous year.
It is calling for a 35 per cent rise, claiming pay has been eroded by more than a quarter since 2008/2009.
It also comes as official figures released yesterday revealed England’s backlog, for NHS procedures like hip and knee replacements, now stands at 7.6million.
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.
Rishi Sunak made cutting waiting lists one of his 2023 priorities, pledging in January that ‘lists will fall and people will get the care they need more quickly’.
However, he has acknowledged that strikes across the health service are making the task ‘more challenging’.
Consultants, who earn in excess of £100,000, on average, will also take to their own 48-hour picket line from August 24.
Further action is planned by the BMA for September if the Government ‘refuses to agree to pay talks’.
The waiting list rose by more than 100,000 in June after a three-day strike by junior doctors led to 106,000 appointments and procedures being cancelled.
The action by medics also saw up to 20,000 staff off per day.
Health leaders say the industrial action is hampering efforts to tackle the Covid treatment backlog, with 800,000 appointments and operations cancelled since December due to walkouts among junior doctors, consultants, nurses and other hospital staff.
But they believe the true total may be in excess of a million because many hospitals have avoided scheduling appointments on strike days so they do not need to cancel them.
Sir Hartley also told the Today programme: ‘Significant number of patient procedures, appointments having to be postponed and rearranged and that will create a significant number of all of those to be cancelled and rearranged which adds to the total so far of around 800,000.
‘So it’s likely we are going to be moving up towards a million mark in terms of the overall impact of strikes.
‘Added to that, the cost – every strike costs a huge amount to the NHS.’
Dr Vivek Trivedi (left) and Dr Robert Laurenson (right), co-chairmen of the BMA’s junior doctors committee, said this morning: ‘If they want a health service that retains this talent for decades to come, they need to come to the table – not in weeks, not in months, but today. This dispute should never have gone on so long. It has now been almost three months since the Government was last willing to talk to junior doctors about their pay’
Health leaders say the industrial action is hampering efforts to tackle the Covid treatment backlog, with 800,000 appointments and operations cancelled as a result. But they believe the true total may be in excess of a million because many hospitals have avoided scheduling appointments on strike days so they do not need to cancel them. Pictured, junior doctors holding BMA placards on the picket lines outside St Thomas’s Hospital in London this morning
Concerns have also been raised over the impact of the latest industrial action because a High Court ruling means the NHS cannot seek support from agency staff, as was the case during previous walkouts.
Bosses said this would be an ‘additional challenge’ during this round of strikes even though they can still use their own bank staff to fill in for striking workers.
Meanwhile, analysis from the Health Service Journal last month revealed around a quarter of NHS trusts paid consultants premium rates — in line with the BMA’s rate card — to provide strike cover during the first two junior doctors’ walkouts.
The card advises consultants charge an hourly rate of £161 on weekdays, £215 at a weekend and in excess of £260 overnight.
Writing in the Daily Mail today, health secretary Steve Barclay accused the BMA of continuing ‘to act recklessly’ by implementing ‘further unnecessary strike action’.
He said the union’s threat to continue striking indefinitely was pointless and ‘particularly concerning’ in the run-up to winter, when the NHS comes under more pressure.
Mr Barclay also claimed the lowest paid junior doctors, those in their first year of training, will see their basic average pay increase by 10.3 per cent to around £47,600.
When they progress to consultant level, they earn an average £134,000 a year and retire with an inflation-proofed annual pension of £78,000 – four times the UK average of £18,772.
His Conservative colleague, chief secretary to the Treasury John Glen, said the rescheduling of thousands of operations was ‘not good for patients’ as he defended the pay offer made to those striking.
‘We as a Government have to be responsible in the pay settlements that we give, and we listened to the Independent Pay Review body and that means giving junior doctors in their first year over 10 per cent increase,’ he told Sky News.
But Dr Laurenson and Dr Vivek Trivedi, co-chairmen of the BMA’s junior doctors committee, said this morning: ‘If they want a health service that retains this talent for decades to come, they need to come to the table – not in weeks, not in months, but today.
‘This dispute should never have gone on so long. It has now been almost three months since the Government was last willing to talk to junior doctors about their pay.
‘Since then, we have stated repeatedly that our door remains open for talks at any time, as long as we could be presented with a credible offer that would address pay erosion of more than a quarter over the last fifteen years.
‘Instead of acting responsibly and coming to the table, the Government has wasted time by first saying nothing and then having the Prime Minister declare an end to talks without first having stepped into the room with doctors.’
They added: ‘He then adds insult to injury by blaming those same doctors for rising waiting lists.
‘Sooner or later the Government will accept that they need to work with doctors rather than against them. We are here to talk when they do.’
The action also comes despite junior doctors being given a six per cent pay rise and a £1,250 lump sum under No. 10’s pay offer. Rishi Sunak said the deal, announced last month 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’. Pictured, junior doctors outside University College London Hospital today
The pay offer from No. 10 means from 2023/24 junior doctors will earn from £32,000 and up to £63,000, for the most senior. The BMA however immediately rejected the rise vowing to crack on with strike action. Pictured, junior doctors outside University College London Hospital today
They said: ‘We are now at the stage where a whole new cohort of junior doctors is entering the profession, only to be immediately given no choice by the Government but to go on strike for their future.
‘The Government should be ashamed that this is the state of the profession they are presenting to our newest doctors.’
Informal negotiations restarted this week between the Government and the BMA, which is the first time in weeks that the two sides have been in talks, the Health Service Journal reported.
It is thought that the Department of Health initiated the discussions in a bid to avert strike action.
Speaking to the Today Programme this morning, Dr Laurenson, also said: ‘We would always like to talk and we’d always like to avert strike action.
‘Indeed, you know, Mr Barclay could send us an email – or preferably Mr Sunak – and we could organise a negotiation right now and stop the next four days of strike action.’
The NHS is urging the public to continue to use 999 for life-threatening emergencies and 111 online for anything non-urgent.
It says GPs and pharmacies are also open and largely unaffected. Patients should attend appointments unless told otherwise.