A FIFTH round of strike action by junior doctors in England begins this morning, from 7am today until 7am on Tuesday 15 August.
There will be BMA picket lines outside hospitals around the country this morning and at 4pm today the doctors’ union is holding a rally in Whitehall outside Downing Street, with speeches from 5pm.
Thousands of new doctors, fresh out of medical school and who joined the NHS only last week, will be joining pickets up and down the country.
Dr Raymond Effah, a striking first year doctor who has just begun his first placement, said: ‘When I chose medicine as my career, never did I imagine my second week in the job would see me going on strike.
‘The government may not see the value of myself and my doctor colleagues, but we do, leaving us no choice but to strike. As a medical student I have now gone through a pandemic, a cost-of-living crisis, and now have student debts of almost £100,000. Even with the 10% pay uplift, I’m still starting in a job where real terms pay has eroded by more than a quarter.’
Co-chairs of the junior doctors committee Dr Robert Laurenson and Dr Vivek Trivedi said: ‘We are now at the stage where a whole new cohort of junior doctors is entering the profession, only to be immediately given no choice by the government but to go on strike for their future.
‘The government should be ashamed that this is the state of the profession they are presenting to our newest doctors.
‘If they want a health service that retains this talent for decades to come, they need to come to the table – not in weeks, not in months, but today. This dispute should never have gone on so long.
‘It has now been almost three months since the government was last willing to talk to junior doctors about their pay.
‘Since then, we have stated repeatedly that our door remains open for talks at any time, as long as we could be presented with a credible offer that would address pay erosion of more than a quarter over the last fifteen years.
‘Instead of acting responsibly and coming to the table, the government has wasted time by first saying nothing and then having the Prime Minister declare an end to talks without first having stepped into the room with doctors.
‘He then adds insult to injury by blaming those same doctors for rising waiting lists. Sooner or later the government will accept that they need to work with doctors rather than against them. We are here to talk when they do.’
• See editorial – TUC must be forced to call a general strike to defend the NHS.