Junior doctors in North Yorkshire return to work following strike

Members of the BMA walked out on Thursday

Author: PA news agency Published 1st Jul 2024
Last updated 2nd Jul 2024

Junior Doctors in North Yorkshire will head back to work this morning after a five day strike.

They walked out in a row over pay and conditions last Thursday.

Georgina works at the Friarage hospital in Northallerton and tells us about the kind of pressure they're under: "I come in here on a morning, before 9 o'clock, we kind of just hand over and work out what is going on, I see all the patients on my ward which is about 30 patients, between the team of us there is usually about two doctors covering 30 patients."

"I make sure that everyone is doing well, I change treatment plans, I kind of do as much as I can to get people home and then I've got everything on top, it's not just off you go, out you go, we have to make sure we do follow ups and all that kind of thing."

As doctors return to work Georgina has thanked everyone who has backed the walk out: "A big thank you, we really appreciate all the support that we do get for these strikes, it really means a lot, it shows that you do appreciate us and we are worth what we think we are kind of worth so thank you."

Hospitals left to "pick up the pieces"

Meanwhile health leaders have warned that strikes "must not become the status quo" for the NHS.

Experts said that patients are "bearing the brunt" of the dispute, with delays caused by the postponement of appointments leaving them in "pain or discomfort".

It is expected that tens of thousands of appointments, procedures and operations were postponed as a result of the industrial action by members of the British Medical Association (BMA).

NHS leaders said that hospitals have been left to "pick up the pieces" as staff work to reschedule all of the appointments lost during strike days.

Officials are expected to confirm the number of appointments that were postponed on Friday - the day after voters take to the polls in the General Election.

Health leaders have called for the long-running dispute to be brought to a close swiftly.

Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said the impact of the strike will be felt "for some time to come" adding: "We know that tens of thousands of operations and appointments are likely to have been cancelled.

"Now health leaders and their teams will need to begin picking up the pieces by rescheduling all these so that patients can get the treatments they so desperately need.

"It is important to remember that it is patients who are bearing the brunt of this ongoing dispute, patients who are often waiting in pain or discomfort for care.

"While we recognise that junior doctors have genuine issues over pay, conditions and training, it is questionable that these strikes in the midst of a General Election campaign could have moved the dial. We are concerned that so many patients should have their care disrupted when no government was in a position to negotiate.

"We hope that the next government can re-start negotiations and bring this dispute to an end so the NHS can focus on improving performance and cutting waiting lists rather than filling rota gaps and rescheduling appointments."

Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, said: "This strike may have ended but more could be on the horizon unless the next government resolves the NHS industrial disputes as a matter of urgency.

"Damaging and demoralising strikes must not become the status quo for the NHS and patients.

"There have been no winners in this strike. Tens of thousands of patients have had their care disrupted, junior doctors are still in dispute and trusts will have incurred huge costs paying senior staff premium rates to cover striking staff at a time they can least afford it.

"With the country going to the polls this week, trust leaders will be looking to the next government and junior doctors to reset industrial relationships and prevent further walkouts. The alternative doesn't bear thinking about."

Professor Philip Banfield, chair of council at the BMA, said: "This week the Prime Minister sadly declined to make a commitment to fair pay. This Government has failed junior doctors once again, as they have done across a decade of mismanagement of the health service.

"A refusal to simply listen to frontline staff and deal with chronic workforce shortages has led to waiting lists at scandalous lengths and an NHS at the point of collapse.

"After 11 rounds of strike action in the face of ever-declining value of their pay, doctors have now emphatically shown they will not take it lying down.

"It will be for the government elected this week to take a new direction - one of collaboration not conflict with NHS staff, one where the health service gets the investment it needs, and where healthcare in this country gets an injection of the medicine it has sorely been lacking - hope."

Professor Sir Stephen Powis, NHS England's national medical director, said that the strike had caused "disruption" across the service, adding: "Staff are working hard to rebook appointments that were affected by the strikes, but we do expect the impact on patients to continue while we recover services."

The walkout was the 11th strike by junior doctors in 20 months.

Junior doctors make up half of the medical workforce and their last walkout in February led to 91,048 appointments, procedures and operations being cancelled.

Medics in training have said their pay has been cut by more than a quarter over the last 15 years and have called for a 35% increase.

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