logo
Senior doctors asked about prospect of industrial action amid row over pay

Senior doctors asked about prospect of industrial action amid row over pay

Many doctors were given a 4% pay uplift in May.
But the British Medical Association (BMA) said at the time that the pay rise does not go far enough in restoring historical pay freezes.
The union announced that consultants and specialist, associate specialist, and specialty (SAS) doctors in England will take part in an indicative ballot over the recent pay offer.
A 4% pay uplift, less than current inflation, is an insult to doctors in England. This Government has shown it simply doesn't value doctors. 'The DDRB has failed doctors. If this is the best they can do, government needs to think again.' says @DrPhilBanfield This 'award'… pic.twitter.com/aXNkcBWNgW
— The BMA (@TheBMA) May 22, 2025
The BMA said that after the offer the committees representing these doctors wrote to the Health Secretary Wes Streeting calling for him to meet for negotiations.
But the union said it had not received a reply.
The indicative ballot, which will ask whether they are willing to take part in industrial action, will open on July 21 and close on September 1.
Resident doctors in England, formally known as junior doctors, are already being balloted over the prospect of strike action.
BMA consultants committee co-chairs Dr Helen Neary and Dr Shanu Datta, said in a statement: 'Last month's offer was an insult to senior doctors and undoes so much of the progress made last year.
'The 4% was below April's RPI inflation, let alone anywhere close to making a dent in the huge pay cuts consultants have experienced over the last 17 years.
'Without restoring consultants' value we will continue to drive our most experienced clinical leaders and academics away – in many cases to better pay and conditions overseas – when patients and the public need them most.
'We've been clear to the Government that we're ready to get around the table and to secure a better outcome for doctors, patients and the public, but with no response, we have no choice but to prepare for the possibility of further action.'
They added: 'Our resident colleagues have already launched their ballot, to which we offer them our fully fledged support. We ask the Government whether it can really risk having several groups of doctors on picket lines together later this year.'
BMA SAS committee chairwoman Dr Ujjwala Mohite added: 'SAS doctors are the backbone and unsung heroes of the NHS, yet this year's pay 'award' once again completely disregards the value we offer to patients and the health service.
'Even with the uplift, SAS pay will be down by almost a quarter in real terms compared to 2008. We are certainly not working a quarter less than we were 16 years ago.'
The Department of Health and Social Care has been approached for comment.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NHS Scotland: Why the future of five delayed treatment centres will now not be known until December
NHS Scotland: Why the future of five delayed treatment centres will now not be known until December

Scotsman

time40 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

NHS Scotland: Why the future of five delayed treatment centres will now not be known until December

Proposals to open the NHS national treatment centres were put on hold in February 2024. Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Patients will have to wait another six months to find out the future of five delayed NHS treatment centres. The Scottish Government said the proposals to open five new national treatment centres will now not be revealed until its 2026/27 Budget is set out in December. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Plans to open national treatment centres in Livingston, Perth, Aberdeen, Ayr and Cumbernauld were put on hold in February last year due to funding problems. Your father may also be able to make a claim for compensation if he can establish that the surgery fell below an acceptable standard. The Government previously said it would set out its new plans for these centres after the Chancellor's Spending Review, which took place earlier this month. Ministers had hoped the network of treatment centres would help tackle the growing backlog of operations. There are 559,742 people waiting for a new outpatient appointment in Scotland, with some waiting more than two years. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad First Minister John Swinney has pledged to bring waiting lists down by providing an extra 150,000 appointments. Originally the network of national treatment centres was due to carry out 40,000 additional procedures, including elective surgeries and diagnostics, by 2026. Four of these centres have already been opened in Clydebank, Kirkcaldy, Inverness and Larbert. However, the Larbert centre at the Forth Valley Royal Hospital is only partially opened. The further five proposed sites have now been further delayed despite £34 million having already been spent on them. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad A spokesperson for the Scottish Government said it was spending more than £1 billion on capital investments in the health service this year and had committed to progressing work on one of the five unbuilt national treatment centres, as well as replacing the Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion in Edinburgh. The spokesperson said: 'As part of our own Scottish spending review, we are undertaking a full review of our capital spending to prioritise the available funding towards projects that drive progress against our priorities. 'We will provide clarity over which projects and programmes will receive funding in the medium term when we publish our new infrastructure pipeline, alongside the 2026/27 Budget and Scottish spending review.

Ozempic-like fat jabs to be rolled out by NHS in high street pharmacies WITHOUT having to see a GP
Ozempic-like fat jabs to be rolled out by NHS in high street pharmacies WITHOUT having to see a GP

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Ozempic-like fat jabs to be rolled out by NHS in high street pharmacies WITHOUT having to see a GP

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) NHS weight loss jabs could rolled in pharmacies under plans to make them more widely available and "tackle the obesity epidemic". Pharmacists could be given the power to prescribe injections like Wegovy and Mounjaro on the NHS, meaning patients won't need to see a GP to get them. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 Pharmacists may be given the power to prescribe weight loss jabs on the NHS Credit: Alamy The jabs - which work mimicking hormones released by the body when we're full to reduce hunger pangs - can currently only be given out on the NHS by GPs or specialist clinics, which tend to have long waiting lists. They can also be bought privately via licensed online pharmacies - but this can cost patients around £200 a month and could also allow people who aren't obese to access the jabs. It was announced earlier this month that GPs would begin prescribing Mounjaro to a select few patients with a BMI of 40 or over and obesity-related health conditions. While the long-term plan is for weight loss jabs to be more widely available, a gradual roll-out has been adopted to manage GPs' workload and NHS resources while getting the injections to those most in need. Experts have previously warned only 220,000 people out of the 3.4million who are eligible are likely to get jabs by 2028. Officials expect that pharmacies - rather than GPs - will eventually be able to prescribe drugs like Mounjaro and Wegovy to patients who are obese but don't have other serious health problems that could complicate their course of treatment. New proposals to allow pharmacists to start prescribing weight loss meds on the NHS will form part of the Government's 10 Year Health Plan, due to be unveiled later this week by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. The plans will also see pharmacies made 'major player[s] on NHS front line', The Telegraph reported. They will be given extra powers to help more patients issues like obesity, asthma, high blood pressure and diabetes. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: 'I'm determined to get the care you need as close as possible to your home and, as pillars of our communities, pharmacies will play a vital role. Women taking fat jabs need 'effective contraception' - as health chiefs warn of serious harm to unborn babies 'The nation's high streets will join the front line of NHS care, as pharmacists get far more power to prescribe and manage a range of health conditions. "Our Plan for Change will give patients greater choice and access to the right care, so your healthcare fits around your life – not the other way round.' Pharmacists will also be encouraged to give obesity-sufferers dietary counselling and lifestyle advice, The Telegraph said. The NHS also plans to work with weight loss jab suppliers to push down the price of the drugs, to make it affordable for the health service to offer jabs to every clinically obese person who wants one, according to The i. Wegovy vs Ozempic - what's the difference? Ozempic is often used as a catch-all term for weight loss drugs, but the drug - whose active ingredient is semaglutide - is actually prescribed to treat type 2 diabetes and has the added benefit of making users lose weight. Its manufacturer Novo Nordisk later released a higher dose of semaglutide under the brand name Wegovy to treat obesity. Using Ozempic for weight loss would mean you're using it 'off label' and not for its intended purpose. Not only could that be dangerous to you, it could also mean you're depriving diabetes patients from vital medication. Wegovy and Ozempic are in a class of drugs called glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RA). They work by mimicking the GLP-1 hormone produced naturally by your gut when you eat food, which signals to the brain that you're full and prevents you from overeating Pharmaceutical companies will be offered the chance to team up with the NHS on clinical trials which could bring more treatments to market in due course, the paper added. Labour's forthcoming 10 Year Health Plan will also see supermarkets pushed to 'make the healthy choice the easy choice' for shoppers, by changing the layout of shops or offering discounts on certain items. He said that cutting 216 calories from the daily intake of every overweight person would halve the nation's obesity rate. According to Mr Streeting, the measures represent a "shift from sickness to prevention". He claimed cutting 216 calories from the daily intake of every overweight person would halve the nation's obesity rate. The Health Secretary said: "Obesity has doubled since the 1990s and costs our NHS £11 billion a year, triple the budget for ambulance services. "Unless we curb the rising tide of cost and demand, the NHS risks becoming unsustainable. "The good news is that it only takes a small change to make a big difference. "If everyone who is overweight reduced their calorie intake by around 200 calories a day – the equivalent of a bottle of fizzy drink – obesity would be halved. "Through our new healthy food standard, we will make the healthy choice the easy choice, because prevention is better than cure."

Couples experiencing secondary infertility eligible for free IVF treatment
Couples experiencing secondary infertility eligible for free IVF treatment

BreakingNews.ie

time5 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Couples experiencing secondary infertility eligible for free IVF treatment

Couples experiencing secondary infertility will be eligible for free fertility treatment including IVF in a Government-funded scheme, the Minister for Health has confirmed. From Monday, couples who already have a child but meet all other access criteria can access publicly funded assisted human reproduction treatment. Advertisement This includes one full cycle of in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) or intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill announced updated access criteria, saying: 'Since we introduced publicly funded assisted human reproduction (AHR) treatment in September 2023, close to 2,500 couples have been referred by reproductive specialist consultants, and many have achieved their dream of starting a family. Jennifer Carroll MacNeill. Photo: Niall Carson/PA 'Fertility issues can be devastating, and I am conscious that secondary infertility is a significant issue, with many people facing huge financial and emotional difficulties in their attempts to have a second child. 'I have listened to the requests from parents in this difficult situation, and I am pleased that we are now in a position to make this potentially life-changing treatment available to more people. Advertisement 'With effect from June 30th, 2025, the current access criteria will be extended to include couples with one existing child in their relationship.' She said work is under way to progress the legislation and establish a regulatory authority. The Health (Assisted Human Reproduction) Act 2024 was signed into law by in July last year. A supplementary Bill to deal with issues such as parentage and citizenship in surrogacy arrangements as well as donor-assisted conception is also being worked on. Advertisement Entertainment Katie Price ends IVF journey feeling 'exhausted' w... Read More Ms MacNeill added: 'We are making significant progress in relation to AHR legislation, and formal drafting of the Health (Assisted Human Reproduction) (Amendment) Bill is nearing completion. 'Officials at my department are working closely with officials at the Department of Justice and the Department of Children to finalise the Bill. Intensive work is under way to publish this legislation as soon as is practical. 'One critical piece in the AHR jigsaw is the establishment of a regulatory authority. Good progress has been made in relation to the establishment of the Assisted Human Reproduction Regulatory Authority.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store