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We cannot let strikes drag on into winter, says NHS England chief

NHS leaders have implored the Government and striking doctors to end the dispute.

Ella Pickover
Wednesday 05 July 2023 10:58 BST
NHS leaders have implored doctors and the Government to find a solution to the dispute over pay (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
NHS leaders have implored doctors and the Government to find a solution to the dispute over pay (Stefan Rousseau/PA) (PA Wire)

The head of the NHS has implored doctors and the Government to work to end their bitter dispute over pay, as she warned that strikes ā€œcannot drag onā€ into the NHS’s busy winter months.

Amanda Pritchard, chief executive of NHS England, said that patients are ā€œheartbrokenā€ when appointments and operations are postponed as a result of strike action.

So far around 650,000 appointments, operations and procedures have been postponed as a result of strike action in the NHS in England alone, with the threat of more cancellations to come as doctors are preparing to stage more strikes next week.

Conciliation service Acas has said that it is ā€œready and prepared to helpā€ but the Government is refusing to enter talks with doctors while strikes are scheduled.

Later this month, junior doctors are planning to stage the largest walkout in the NHS’s history – from July 13-18.

And consultants – the most senior doctors in the NHS – are planning to stage industrial action from July 20-21, when they will only provide scaled-back ā€œChristmas Day coverā€.

Ms Pritchard said that the strikes, which are ā€œpretty much back-to-backā€ will pose a ā€œreal challengeā€ for the NHS.

Earlier this week, the British Medical Association (BMA) threatened to strike ā€œuntil the next general election and beyondā€ and warned that other doctor groups could also stage walkouts, including GPs.

ā€œWe are now eight months into the most disruptive, most significant period of industrial action in our history,ā€ Ms Pritchard told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

ā€œThat is now likely to get more challenging again, as we hit both junior doctors and consultants taking action.

ā€œIn the middle of this month, we’ve got action planned seven out of eight days and it’s pretty much back-to-back so that will really challenge our system.

ā€œMy job isn’t pay, that’s (for) the Government to do with unions, but my job is absolutely to work with unions and with the NHS to make sure that we are mitigating the risks to patients’ safety.ā€

She added: ā€œWe work with everyone to try and make sure that in the course of industrial action, we are focused on keeping patients safe and minimising disruption.

ā€œBut the hard truth is this is now proving to be really very disruptive for patients.

ā€œWe’ve had many hundreds of thousands appointments, procedures cancelled, rescheduled.

ā€œAnd you know, the next set of action is going to mean more of that.

ā€œIt’s heartbreaking when you have an appointment cancelled when you have a procedure cancelled, particularly if you’ve been waiting a long time, and particularly if it’s not the first time that’s happened.

ā€œSo I really would urge all sides to redouble their efforts to find a solution.

ā€œLast winter was the busiest on record and we cannot let strikes drag on into this winter.ā€

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