21 Dec 2022

Patient safety at risk, UK ministers warned as healthcare staff strike

2:24 pm on 21 December 2022
Nurses and their supporters gather outside Downing Street after marching from University College London Hospital through central London on the second day of strike action over pay and patient safety called by the Royal College of Nursing in London, United Kingdom on December 20, 2022. Up to 100,000 nurses across 70 trusts and health organisations in England, Wales and Northern Ireland are taking part in the industrial action calling for a 19% pay rise to overcome years of real-terms pay cuts and to protect patient safety by allowing the NHS to recruit and retain nurses amid critical shortage of staff.

Nurses and their supporters gather outside Downing Street after marching from University College London Hospital through central London on the second day of strike action over pay and patient safety on 20 December 2022. Photo: NurPhoto via AFP

British health sector bosses are warning the government of the risk to patient safety from a wave of industrial action as ambulance workers prepare to walk out and nurses threaten further strikes in a dispute over pay.

Around 100,000 nurses went on strike on Tuesday for the second time in a week as their union issued an ultimatum to the government to respond to pay demands within 48 hours or face another round of industrial action in January.

Ambulance staff in England and Wales are set to follow suit on Wednesday and 28 December, leaving those with all but the most life-threatening conditions to make their own way to hospital.

"We cannot guarantee patient safety, we cannot avoid risks in the context of this industrial action," Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation which represents national health service organisations, told BBC Radio.

"We are worried about the risks tomorrow but with the possibility of further strikes developing as winter unfolds ... we are entering into a very dangerous time. This is why we are upping even more our call to the government and to the trade unions to try to find a way of resolving this dispute."

The strike by nurses is unprecedented in the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) union's 106-year history, but it says it has no choice as the soaring cost of living leaves workers struggling to make ends meet.

The RCN says its members' real-term earnings have fallen by 6 percent in the last decade and has called for a pay rise of 5 percent above the RPI rate of inflation, which stood at 14 percent in November.

The government awarded nurses around 4 percent on average, on the recommendation of an independent pay review body, and has declined to discuss pay further. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the nurses' demands were unaffordable.

"I will negotiate with him at any point to stop nursing staff and patients going into the new year facing such uncertainty," RCN head Pat Cullen said.

"But if this government isn't prepared to do the right thing, we'll have no choice but to continue in January."

A YouGov poll published on Tuesday found two thirds of Britons support the nurses' strike, with 63 percent backing action by ambulance staff. The majority of those surveyed said the government was most to blame for the strikes.

"Our door is open to discuss with the unions anything relating to working conditions. What we can't do is go back into reopening the pay award," junior health minister Will Quince told Sky News.

Critical incident

The strikes are putting extra pressure on healthcare provision in the state-funded National Health Service when it is already stretched by staff shortages and record backlogs due to Covid delays.

A hospital in southern England and the South East Coast Ambulance Service both said on Tuesday they had declared a critical incident due to extreme pressures on their services.

"Our members are tired of going to work every day and in some cases, spending the whole of their shift sat on an ambulance outside an A&E department with the same patient," Rachel Harrison, GMB union public services national secretary, told a committee of lawmakers.

"We've had examples where our members have clocked off at the end of one shift to return the following day to the same patient being on that ambulance."

The military have been put on standby to help drive ambulances and ministers are meeting with unions on Tuesday to discuss which emergencies ambulances will still respond to, amid media reports those suffering heart attacks or strokes might not qualify.

- Reuters

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