NHS strikes: Junior doctors and consultants to go on strike together for the first time

The joint strikes will begin next month.
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Junior doctors and consultants will hold a joint strike for the first time in the history of the health service.

The co-ordinated industrial action is set to take place in September and October, the British Medical Association (BMA) said.

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Consultants had already announced plans to walk out for 48 hours from September 19, and will be joined by their junior colleagues on September 20.

The joint strikes will take place over the next two months.The joint strikes will take place over the next two months.
The joint strikes will take place over the next two months.

Junior doctors will then continue their strike on September 21 and 22. Both consultants and junior doctors will then strike together on October 2, 3 and 4.

Staff will work on a “Christmas day cover” basis for both spells of industrial action, meaning emergency care will continue to be provided.

It comes after junior doctors voted in favour to continuing strike action, with the BMA’s mandate on industrial action renewed for another six months.

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The union has now told Prime Minister Rishi Sunak he has “nowhere to hide”.

Junior doctor committee co-chairmen Dr Rob Laurenson and Dr Vivek Trivedi said: “Today, junior doctors across England are sending a single message, loud and clear to the Government: we are not going anywhere.

“We are prepared to continue with our industrial action, but we don’t have to – the Prime Minister has the power to halt any further action by making us a credible offer that we can put to our members. Refusing to negotiate with us and with our consultant colleagues is not the way ahead.

“Rishi Sunak now has nowhere to hide. There can be no more delaying, no more wasting time with impositions of pay deals, no more declarations that strikes must end before even stepping in the room with us.

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“If he does not come to the table with a credible offer on pay, he will face another six months of strike action. And another six months after, and after that, if he continues to ignore us. He knows the stakes, he knows our ask and now he knows our resolve.”

In July, the Government said junior doctors would get pay rises of 6 per cent, along with an additional consolidated £1,250 increase, and hospital consultants will also receive 6 per cent.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay has said there will be “no more negotiations on pay”.

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