Gulf Today

Hancock faces backlash over pension changes

-

LONDON: Health secretary Mat Hancock is facing a backlash from senior NHS figures who say proposed pension changes for doctors are unfair to them.

One hospital trust chief executive said he felt like a “second class NHS citizen” because of the exclusion of managers from the reform announced on Wednesday.

Hancock and chancellor Sajid Javid have announced an overhaul of pension rules to allow top doctors and surgeons to treat more patients without losing out financiall­y.

Clinicians have been refusing to work beyond planned hours because of new rules introduced in 2016 meant that overtime pay was clawed back in tax. The new rules will allow NHS employees to scale down pension contributi­ons without losing employer contributi­ons. And the Department of Health and Social Care is to consult on proposed “flexibilit­ies” to the pension scheme to ensure that from the next financial year, frontline staff can remain in it without fear of financial penalty.

Health service union Unison warned that the move would help only a small proportion of NHS staff and “looks alarmingly like the beginning of a ‘clinicians-first’ approach to pension strategy”.

And, in comments highlighte­d by the Health Service Journal, senior managers complained that the pension changes will apply only to senior clinical staff. Mark Brandreth, chief executive of the Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedi­c Hospital in Oswestry, said: “I have never felt like more of a second-class NHS citizen. An employee of 26 years treated disrespect­fully by our political class… What about a doctor no longer working clinically who is in a senior management role?”

Executive director of workforce at the University Hospitals of Derby and Burton, Neil Pease, said: “Any reforms must apply to all staff not just one group. I’m sure medical colleagues and the British Medical Associatio­n would equally not want such a division.”

The chief nurse at Homerton Hospital NHS Trust, Catherine Pelley, said: “The pension issue is not just a doctor issue. This is affecting senior nurses and many managers supporting their medical colleagues.

“Only solving the issue for one part of the NHS is divisive.”

Radiologis­t David Litle tweeted that “the changes absolutely must not be limited to ‘senior clinicians’ — must be same for all”, while consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon Stephen Duckett said: “Crazy and unjust. Need to treat clinical and non clinical senior staff equitably.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain