Bangkok Post

Nurses launch fresh strikes

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LONDON: Nurses in England began two days of strikes over pay yesterday, as officials warned of disruption for thousands of patients in the UK’s state-run health service.

It comes after nurses held an unpreceden­ted strike last month, joining a wave of industrial action by public sector workers hit by the cost-of-living crisis.

The main nursing union accuses the government of failing to negotiate seriously on improving their pay deal for the current year.

The latest walkout piles further pressure on the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) at a time of peak demand and lengthy waiting lists for treatment.

“It is inevitable industrial action will have an impact on patients,” health minister Steve Barclay said on Tuesday.

Two days of strikes by nurses in England and Wales in December led to the cancellati­on of “around 30,000 elective procedures and outpatient appointmen­ts”, Mr Barclay said.

“Patients will understand­ably be worried by the prospect of further strike action by nurses,” he added.

Yet the plight of medical staff has prompted public sympathy as soaring food prices and energy bills have hit lower-paid workers across the board.

A YouGov poll on Tuesday found 63% supported the nurses’ strike.

But Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s official spokesman said on Tuesday that it is not “the right course of action.

“We continue to call unions to step away from the picket lines and continue with discussion­s.”

Matthew Taylor, head of the NHS Confederat­ion, which represents state health care providers in England and Wales, yesterday urged ministers to renew pay talks with trade unions.

“Our message to the government is to give the NHS a fighting chance and do all you can to bring an end to this damaging dispute,” Mr Taylor said.

This week’s nursing strikes could cause 4,500 cancelled operations and 25,000 cancelled outpatient appointmen­ts, the NHS Confederat­ion estimated.

Further strikes are planned for Feb 6-7 by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) union, which said they will “be at the highest intensity in our history”.

RCN general secretary Pat Cullen said: “My olive branch to government­s — asking them to meet me halfway and begin negotiatio­ns — is still there. They should grab it.”

A union representi­ng ambulance workers, GMB, was also expected to announce yesterday that it will resume strike action.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Ambulance workers protest outside the Docklands Emergency Operating Centre, Newham Dockside, in London.
REUTERS Ambulance workers protest outside the Docklands Emergency Operating Centre, Newham Dockside, in London.

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