Senior doctors in England announce more strikes, rejecting pay deal
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Consultant-level doctors in the NHS will strike on Aug 24 and 25, adding to previously announced strikes on July 20 and 21.
PHOTO: AFP
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LONDON - Senior doctors in England will hold two days of strikes in August, their union the British Medical Association (BMA) said on Monday, dismissing a 6 per cent pay rise announced by the government last week as a “savage” real-terms wage cut.
Consultant-level doctors in Britain’s publicly funded National Health Service (NHS) will strike on Aug 24 and 25, adding to previously announced strikes on Thursday and Friday and underscoring the failure of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s bid to fully end months of industrial action
Mr Sunak last week described recent public sector pay increases as a final settlement, warning they would cost billions, require budget cuts elsewhere, and would not be subject to further negotiation.
While teaching unions paused their strikes and recommended accepting the deal, doctors’ unions were unimpressed after what they say have been years of pay erosion for their members.
“The government has once again imposed a savage real terms pay cut on consultants,” said Dr Vishal Sharma, the BMA’s consultants committee chair.
“In the face of a government intent on devaluing consultants’ expertise and their lack of regard for the impact this is having on the NHS, we have been left with no choice.”
Britain’s inflation rate
This week’s strikes will be the first by consultants in the current pay dispute and are expected to put the NHS under serious strain.
Most routine and elective services will be cancelled, but emergency cover will remain.
Separately, junior doctors in England – qualified physicians who make up nearly half of the medical workforce – are in the middle of a five-day walkout described by the BMA as the longest single strike in their history. REUTERS

