More doctors could strike as row between BMA and Government deepens


More doctors could join picket lines after senior medics announced they were escalating their disputes with the Government.

Consultants and other senior doctors are to be balloted on industrial action after ministers announced they would be getting a 3.5% pay award.

It comes as crunch talks are to take place between resident doctors and the Government.

Sir Keir Starmer has given the resident doctors committee of the British Medical Association (BMA) a 48-hour deadline to reconsider the deal, which includes an offer of thousands of extra NHS training posts.

It is understood the proposal will be removed from the deal if resident doctors in England press ahead with a six-day strike from April 7 in a row over jobs and pay.

The union said it was seeking to talk with officials on Tuesday with โ€œevery intention of achieving a meaningful outcome that could see the strikes called offโ€.

The BMA has also announced that simultaneous ballots of consultants and specialist, associate specialist and specialty (SAS) doctors will run from May 11 until July 6 as both sets of medics escalate disputes with the Government.

Writing in The Times, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: โ€œThe truth is this: no one benefits from rejecting this deal.

โ€œResident doctors will be worse off. Instead of improved pay, progression and support, they will receive the standard pay award this year, with none of the reforms that would have strengthened their working lives.โ€

Sir Keir added: โ€œI say this to the BMAโ€™s resident doctorsโ€™ committee: reconsider.

โ€œGive members a say and put this deal to a vote.

โ€œTo resident doctors, I say this: make your voice heard. This deal improves your pay, your progression and your future. Do not let others decide for you.

โ€œThere are still 48 hours left to choose a better path. For patients, the NHS, and our doctors โ€” I urge you to take it.โ€

The deal sets out a minimum of 4,000 new additional specialty posts to be delivered over the next three years.

NHS England boss Sir Jim Mackey confirmed the offer to expand training places will โ€œcome off the tableโ€ if an agreement is not reached.

He told LBC Radio: โ€œThe reality is that those extra training places cost money. If weโ€™re going to be spending money on managing industrial action, pay for their colleagues, extra cover shifts, that money will disappear.โ€

Dr Jack Fletcher, chairman of the BMA resident doctors committee, said: โ€œThe Government made very late changes to the pay offer, reducing the pay investment and stretching it over a longer period in a way that had not been previously talked about.

โ€œMinisters effectively moved the goalposts on the deal at the last minute.โ€

He added: โ€œRemoving potential doctorsโ€™ posts at a time when corridor care and GP queues are already putting the NHS under pressure is clearly bad for patients.

โ€œCreating posts and improving patient care should not be dependent on calling off a strike.โ€

Posting on X, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: โ€œThe BMA seems surprised that if they reject the deal on offer and go on strike their members donโ€™t get what the Government is offering.

โ€œWe have time before Easter weekend to resolve this dispute.

โ€œA deal on jobs and pay is on the table.โ€

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch told broadcasters on a visit to Hertfordshire: โ€œI donโ€™t think he should be using training places as a bargaining chip. I donโ€™t really understand why heโ€™s doing that.

โ€œIโ€™d like to hear an explanation, because those training places, my understanding is that they are for patients, they are to increase patient support, patient safety, patient welfare.โ€

NHS leaders have said the strike, which coincides with the Easter holiday, will be โ€œchallengingโ€.

In a letter to health leaders, Mike Prentice, national director for emergency planning at NHS England, wrote: โ€œWe expect this round to be challenging as there is a shorter notice period, bank holidays within the notice period and the action itself falling during the Easter holidays.

โ€œThis will represent a significant strain on staffing resources to provide safe cover.โ€

The walkout, which is due to run from 7am on April 7 until 6.59am on April 13, will be the 15th round of strikes by resident doctors in England since 2023.

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