Resident doctors and supporters outside Bristol Royal Infirmary on the first day of a five-day strike last December. Photograph: Finnbarr Webster/Getty ImagesView image in fullscreenResident doctors and supporters outside Bristol Royal Infirmary on the first day of a five-day strike last December. Photograph: Finnbarr Webster/Getty ImagesStreeting hits out at BMA ‘delusion’ as talks to avert resident doctors’ strike failSix-day stoppage in England next week to go ahead and minister confirms offer of extra training places withdrawn
The NHS is bracing for the longest strike yet by resident doctors after last-ditch talks failed, prompting Wes Streeting to accuse the medics of suffering from “delusion”.
Many thousands of resident – formerly junior – doctors across England will stage a six-day stoppage over pay and jobs starting at 7am on Tuesday, just after the Easter weekend. A deadline for agreement ended on Thursday.
It will be the 16th walkout they have staged since their first strike in March 2023, and there are growing fears that the dispute could drag on for another year.
Streeting confirmed in a letter to the British Medical Association that he had now withdrawn his offer to create 1,000 extra places in specialist medical training this year, as that was conditional on the BMA accepting the government’s most recent offer, which it rejected last week.
Talks on Tuesday and Wednesday this week failed to broker a deal that would have led to the BMA suspending or cancelling the strike. The union and ministers remain far apart on a number of key issues including pay.
Jim Mackey, the chief executive of NHS England, said he expected the health service to face “a long slog” of continuing strikes by resident doctors. Services would increasingly care for patients in ways that reduced the need for resident doctors because bosses could not rely on them being at work, he told the Health Service Journal.
Streeting cast doubt on ever reaching a negotiated settlement with the BMA’s resident doctors committee. Some senior doctors believe the dispute is insoluble given the committee’s demand for a 26% pay rise and the state of the public finances making that an increase ministers cannot approve.
In a letter, Streeting told committee’s chair, Dr Jack Fletcher, that after it rebuffed the offer “I had expected the … committee to at least come back with a counterproposal to end these strikes, given your stated commitment to reaching a negotiated settlement. You could not agree one.
“If members of your committee cannot reach an agreed position among themselves, it is hard to see how the government will be able to reach an agreement with your committee.”
He ridiculed the union for wanting the 1,000 extra training places to come on-stream as planned this year despite its failure to agree a settlement.
“The BMA seems to be labouring under the delusion that you can reject the deal but claim the benefits of the offer. But we have been clear with you and your officers the jeopardy involved on jobs and pay,” he wrote.
Streeting had pledged to increase the number of places in specialist medical training this year by 1,000 to help meet the BMA’s demand for an expansion of such roles to rid the NHS of “bottlenecks” that are preventing fully qualified doctors from moving on in their careers.
The estimated £250m cost of each strike and imminent deadline for doctors to apply to start their specialist training this August meant “it is simply not operationally or financially possible” to now deliver the 1,000 additional slots, Streeting told Fletcher.
He was responding to a four-page letter Fletcher sent him on Wednesday in which Fletcher blamed him and Keir Starmer for reducing the chances of a peace deal.
Mike Prentice, NHS England’s national director for emergency planning and incident response, told the service’s 205 trusts earlier this week that the strike’s timing meant it would be “challenging” to cope with, given many staff will be off on Easter holidays.
“This will represent a significant strain on staffing resources to provide safe cover,” he said.