Doctors vote for strike action
Doctors have voted in favour of strike action over changes to their pensions.
The British Medical Association confirmed today that doctors will be striking for the first time in nearly 40 years.
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BRI
The first day of action will take place on June 21 and will see doctors providing all urgent and emergency care, but postponing non-urgent cases.
BMA Council made the decision after considering the results of its ballots on industrial action which closed yesterday.
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Overall, 50 per cent of the 104,544 doctors eligible to vote took part.
Across separate ballots covering six branches of practice, a clear majority of: GPs; consultants; junior doctors; staff, associate specialist and speciality doctors, and public health and community health doctors said they were prepared to take part in both industrial action short of a strike and a strike, while a majority of occupational medicine doctors voted against industrial action.
Although the BMA’s planned action does not constitute a strike as the term is normally understood by the public, the two questions were asked in order to provide maximum legal protection.
Doctors will still be at their usual workplaces.
The government has begun to implement major changes to the NHS pension scheme, despite widespread criticism of its approach from organisations representing health professionals.
In 2008, the BMA, other health unions and the government negotiated a major reform of the NHS scheme, which all agreed made it fair and sustainable well into the future.
The NHS scheme currently delivers a positive cashflow of £2 billion a year to the Treasury, and NHS staff have already accepted responsibility for any future increases in costs due to improved longevity.
The latest changes will see doctors paying up to 14.5 per cent of their salaries in pension contributions – twice as much as some other public sector staff on a similar salary in order to receive a similar pension.
They will also have to work longer to receive their pension – up to 68 for younger doctors.
Dr Hamish Meldrum, Chairman of Council at the BMA, said: “We are taking this step very reluctantly, and would far prefer to negotiate for a fairer solution. But this clear mandate for action – on a very high turnout – reflects just how let down doctors feel by the government’s unwillingness to find a fairer approach to the latest pension changes and its refusal to acknowledge the major reforms of 2008 that made the NHS scheme sustainable in the long term.
“Non-urgent work will be postponed and, although this will be disruptive to the NHS, doctors will ensure patient safety is protected. All urgent and emergency care will be provided and we will work closely with managers so that anyone whose care is going to be affected can be given as much notice as possible.Patients do not need to do anything now.
“We will also run our own publicity campaign to make sure that members of the public understand what the action will involve and how they can find out what it might mean for them and their families.
“This is not a step that doctors take lightly – this is the first industrial action doctors have taken since 1975. We have consistently argued that the Government should reconsider its position, and even at this stage we would much prefer to negotiate a fairer deal than to take action. We are not seeking preferential treatment but fair treatment. The government’s wholesale changes to an already reformed NHS pension scheme cannot be justified.”




Comments
by BCFCfinker
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 8:19PM
“A document that gives the salaries various medical staff can expect:
http://tinyurl.com/7u4h9xj
GPs on over 100k
Senior consultants probably on over 100k
I will lay odds, these guys will not be hard done by in their retirement.
Under the current way education is funded, the current crop of doctors will have to pay, on average, about 45k for their education, about 18k more than the average undergraduate.
Uk average salary: men - 31k, women - 24k
Don't get me wrong, I think doctors etc. do an important job but they work for the NHS, a public sector body. These people are not stupid and will understand basic economics, so why do they think they are immune from having to make ends meet?”
by GREASYRON
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 8:18PM
“With most of them on six-figure salaries they'd have to have one hard cocaine habit to not have had put some of that aside by the time they retire...”
by ceembee
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 7:35PM
“Get real medics you are on great wages had a great education mostly funded by the rest of us and can certainly afford to save unlike many workers. Elitist and selfish.”
by lolly60
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 5:45PM
“SELFISH”
by PJB_1972
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 1:37PM
“Yes I was referring to the public sector of course. But you do have to feel for those doctors. They have to get by on a meagre salary as it is so they deserve a gold plated retirement.”
by Mrs_W2009
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 1:19PM
“Everyone else in the public sector you mean. In contrast, most of those working in the private sector could only dream of having a pension at all.....while they shell out vast sums to support the expectations of the public sector.....”
by PJB_1972
Wednesday, May 30 2012, 12:07PM
“Why not. Everyone else is doing it.”