Family doctors in England to begin industrial action
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[August 01, 2024]
By Kylie MacLellan
LONDON (Reuters) -Family doctors in the state-funded National Health
Service (NHS) in England will begin industrial action for the first time
in 60 years on Thursday after voting overwhelmingly in favour of doing
so in a dispute over funding and contract changes.
The British Medical Association (BMA) trade union said more than 8,500
General Practitioners (GPs) had taken part in the ballot with 98.3%
voting in favour of collective action, which would begin immediately.
This would see doctors stopping work they are not formally contracted to
do as well as action such as pulling out of patient data sharing
agreements. The NHS said it could include GPs limiting the number of
patient appointments per day.
"GPs are at the end of their tether. This is an act of desperation. For
too long, we've been unable to provide the care we want to. We are
witnessing general practice being broken," Katie Bramall-Stainer, chair
of BMA's GP committee for England, said.
"The era of the family doctor has been wiped out by recent consecutive
governments and our patients are suffering."
Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said the
decision was "disappointing".
CHANGE OF GOVERNMENT
The ballot for action opened before a July election at which the
Conservative Party lost power after 14 years.
The new Labour government said on Thursday it would give doctors'
surgeries greater freedom over hiring additional staff in order to
recruit more than 1,000 newly-qualified GPs this year, a change the
profession had been calling for.
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Health minister Wes Streeting said
an extra 82 million pounds ($105 million) to hire those GPs would be
paid for by redistributing funds within his department.
"I can understand why GPs wanted to punish the
previous government. But taking collective action will only punish
patients," he wrote in the Telegraph newspaper ahead of the ballot
result being announced.
"I want to reset the relationship between GPs and their government."
Earlier this week the government accepted the recommendation of an
independent body to increase GP pay by 6%, but the BMA said at the
time this did not go far enough.
The BMA said it understood Labour had "inherited a broken NHS" and
it had had some positive conversations with Streeting but felt it
had no choice but to move ahead with action.
"This will not be a 'big bang'. It will be a slow burn. It's likely
that impact may not be felt for some time. We hope this will give
the new government time to consider our proposed solutions including
fixing our contract once and for all," Bramall-Stainer said.
(Reporting by Kylie MacLellan; editing by William James and Ros
Russell)
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