UK junior doctors must ‘move significantly’ on pay claim, says Barclay

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Steve Barclay, health and social care secretary, has said junior doctors in England must “move significantly” from their current pay claim before the government will re-enter talks, as the medics begin their third period of industrial action since March.

Describing the doctors’ 72-hour walkout, beginning at 7am on Wednesday, as “extremely disappointing”, Barclay said it would “put patient safety and our efforts to cut waiting lists at risk”. 

The British Medical Association has dismissed the government’s offer of a 5 per cent pay increase as “in no way credible” as it seeks a settlement to address what it describes as 15 years of pay erosion.

Calling it “a fair and reasonable opening offer”, Barclay said discussions had been under way on “both pay and non-pay issues until [the junior doctors] chose to end the talks by announcing new strike dates”.

If the BMA cancelled these “damaging and disruptive strikes and shows willingness to move significantly from their position, we can resume confidential talks and find a way forward, as we have done with other unions”, he added.

In the meantime, 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,” he said.

An estimated 500,000-plus operations and appointments have been cancelled since NHS workers, including nurses and paramedics, began industrial action last December.

The NHS Staff Council, which represents 14 health unions, in May accepted a pay offer which gives staff a consolidated rise of about 9 per cent over two years. However, a majority of Royal College of Nursing members rejected it, with nurses now balloting for a second six-month strike mandate.

Consultants and radiographers are holding their own ballots as they seek the go-ahead for walkouts.

Health leaders said staff had become accustomed to managing the disruption of strike days but warned of the longer-term consequences for the health service and patients. 

Rory Deighton, director of the acute network at the NHS Confederation, said local services were doing everything they could “to prioritise those with the greatest clinical need and provide safe services for patients”.

However, he warned that “each wave of strikes chips away at the NHS’s resilience, impacting on staff, internal relationships and their ability to deliver on government pledges to reduce the elective backlog”.

Securing consultant cover for absent junior doctors was “a challenge” he noted, as local negotiations over overtime payments continued.

Separately, in an open letter to NHS staff, Barclay said he would work with the NHS Staff Council to oversee implementation of the “non-pay” elements of the pay agreement.

He invited participants in the NHS pay-review body process, including health unions, NHS England and the devolved administrations, to share their views on areas such as “timing of the pay round, appointments process for members, input of the NHS Staff Council and the data and evidence that is fed in”, he said.

Unison general secretary Christina McAnea said that, without fundamental change, “the government risks sleepwalking into a disastrous repeat of the shambolic way ministers handled the two most recent pay rounds”.

A strike by junior doctors in Scotland is set to take place between July 12 and 15 after BMA members rejected Holyrood’s offer of an aggregate 14.5 per cent rise over two years, coupled with talks on a change to the system of pay reviews. 

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