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Junior Doctors’ Strikes

30 March 2023

Lead MP

Steve Barclay

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

NHSEmployment
Other Contributors: 11

At a Glance

Steve Barclay raised concerns about junior doctors’ strikes in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

NHSEmployment
Government Statement
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Ilford North (Wes Streeting) for his question on the planned four-day walkout by junior doctors, starting in May. During a previous strike earlier this month, 181,000 appointments had to be rescheduled, causing significant disruption and risk to patient care. NHS England has prioritised essential services including emergency treatment, critical care, maternity care, neonatal care and trauma, but it cannot fully mitigate the risk of patient harm during a four-day walkout coinciding with public holidays and Ramadan. I have invited the British Medical Association (BMA) and Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association to enter formal talks on pay, conditional upon them cancelling strike action. However, the BMA’s junior doctors committee's demand for a 35% pay increase is unreasonable at this time of economic pressure. Despite this, we remain committed to finding a settlement that recognises the important work of junior doctors within the NHS.

Shadow Comment

Wes Streeting
Shadow Comment
More than 300,000 operations and appointments have been cancelled since December due to industrial action in the NHS. The planned strikes for next month will be longer than any previous ones with no derogations planned. Patients are terrified about their safety during these strikes and consultants fear that patients may die as a result. I urge the Health Secretary to engage junior doctors seriously in talks, stop these catastrophic strikes, and protect patient care. The Government's approach mirrors their failure to address the nurses' strikes until last minute, resulting in a standoff on Twitter rather than proper negotiations. Additionally, there is no sign of the NHS workforce plan addressing staff shortages or the general practice plan improving GP access.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

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