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NHS put up with harm of last strikes, says boss — but not any more

NHS put up with harm of last strikes, says boss — but not any more

Times6 days ago
The chief executive of NHS England has ordered hospital leaders to take a tougher line with the doctors' union when the latest strikes begin next week.
Sir Jim Mackey said he would not put up with the same levels of poor care seen during the previous wave of action, setting local hospitals on a collision course with the British Medical Association (BMA).
'We all tolerated levels of harm and risk last time that I really just don't think we should anymore. We'll be taking a different approach,' he said, ahead of junior doctors' planned five-day walkout from 7am on Friday.
In previous rounds, the BMA imposed a 'Christmas Day' level of service on the NHS, with cancellations and delays for tens of thousands of patients. At a meeting of NHS England's board on Thursday, Mackey said that caused much wider levels of harm than previously realised and the NHS should not accept it.
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