Stabroek News Sunday

UK doctors call off strike action

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LONDON (Reuters) – A union representi­ng British doctors yesterday called off a series of strikes scheduled for the next three months, citing concerns about patient safety.

The British Medical Associatio­n (BMA) had planned a full withdrawal of labour by junior doctors on October 5-7 and 10-11, November 14-18 and December. 5-9, which would have been the longest stoppages in the nearly 70-year history of the National Health Service.

Junior doctors - a term covering recent medical school graduates right through to doctors who have been working for well over a decade have staged a series of walkouts over a new work contract the government plans to impose next month.

The BMA said its decision to suspend the action follows feedback from doctors, patients and the public, and discussion­s with NHS England about the ability of the NHS to maintain a safe service if industrial action were to go ahead.

"Following a passionate, thoughtful and wide-ranging debate amongst junior doctors, the BMA has taken the decision to suspend planned industrial action," said Ellen McCourt, the newly elected chair of the BMA junior doctor committee.

"We still oppose the imposition of the contract and are now planning a range of other actions in order to resist it, but patient safety is doctors' primary concern," she said.

The BMA staged several strikes earlier this year, which escalated in April when junior doctors walked out of all services, including accident and emergency, for a day.

A deal was reached in May between the BMA and the government, but junior doctors voted in July to reject the new contract.

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