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Junior doctors' strike: Jeremy Hunt refuses to negotiate over NHS contract imposition

Medics across the English NHS are going on a five-day strike

Jon Stone
Thursday 01 September 2016 09:31 BST
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Jeremy Hunt on latest strike

Jeremy Hunt has indicated he is not prepared to negotiate over the forced imposition of a new junior doctors’ contract that has prompted a five-day strike by junior doctors.

The Health Secretary blamed doctors for patients left in “pain” during the strike, which will take place from 8.00am to 5.00pm every day from 12 to 16 September. More dates are expected to follow.

The all-out industrial action was triggered after rank-and-file doctors rejected a deal recommended by the British Medical Association junior doctors committee leadership and the government.

The stoppage represents a dramatic escalation in response from the BMA, which has previously conducted rolling strikes.

“If you need a hip replacement that will mean you’re in pain, that’s why you’ve been given the NHS right to have a hip replacement and if you’re told you’re going to have to wait another month or two months that pain is going to continue,” Mr Hunt told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“People will rightly ask why the BMA, who said only in May this was a good deal for patients, a good deal for doctors, good for the NHS, are now saying it’s such a bad deal that they want to inflict the worst doctors’ strike in NHS history.”

Though Mr Hunt said he would do “anything we can do” to stop the strike, he said he would not negotiate over the contract, which doctors say will harm patient safety.

“The judgment that I have to take is that were I to do that would that bring this dispute further to a resolution of further away?” he said.

“My judgment is to proceed with the contracts that was negotiated in May and supported by the BMA leadership but to say we are willing to talk.”

The BMA said doctors would call off the strike if the Government reopened negotiations over the contract and stopped its imposition.

“We have a simple ask of the Government: stop the imposition,” BMA junior doctor committee chair Ellen McCourt said.

“If it agrees to do this, junior doctors will call off industrial action.”

“This is not a situation junior doctors wanted to find themselves in. We want to resolve this dispute through talks, but in forcing through a contract that junior doctors have rejected and which they don’t believe is good for their patients or themselves, the Government has left them with no other choice.

“Junior doctors still have serious concerns with the contract, particularly that it will fuel the workforce crisis, and that it fails to treat all doctors fairly.”

She added that “genuine efforts” to resolve the dispute had been “met with an unwillingness to engage and, at times, deafening silence from the health secretary”.

Mr Hunt has remained as Health Secretary during the dispute despite a sweeping Cabinet reshuffle by Theresa May.

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