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Home / Health / BMA Hypocrisy: Staff Pay Rise Fuels Doctor Strike Fury

BMA Hypocrisy: Staff Pay Rise Fuels Doctor Strike Fury

27 Nov

•

Summary

  • BMA staff awarded 2% pay rise amid resident doctors' 26% strike demand.
  • Health secretary criticizes BMA for acting like a 'cartel'.
  • Each doctor strike costs NHS £250-300 million, worsening waitlists.
BMA Hypocrisy: Staff Pay Rise Fuels Doctor Strike Fury

The British Medical Association (BMA) is under fire for a perceived pay disparity, having offered its own staff a 2% pay rise while resident doctors are striking for a 26% increase. This move has led to accusations of hypocrisy and the BMA being branded a 'cartel' by Health Secretary Wes Streeting.

Resident doctors have already seen a significant pay uplift over recent years but are demanding further increases, leading to disruptive industrial action. These strikes have caused considerable distress to patients, resulting in cancelled appointments and operations. The repeated walkouts are estimated to cost the NHS between £250 million and £300 million per strike, hindering efforts to reduce patient waiting lists.

Adding to the controversy, the GMB union, which represents over three-quarters of BMA staff, reports that 91% of its members would support industrial action against the 2% offer. The GMB highlights that BMA employees have experienced a nearly 17% real-terms pay decrease since 2012, despite the organization advocating for better pay for doctors. NHS England's chief executive urged the BMA to end the strikes, warning of their financial impact.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Resident doctors are striking to demand a 26% increase in their pay, which they argue addresses years of real-terms pay erosion.
The BMA is criticized for hypocrisy after offering its staff a 2% pay rise while advocating for a much larger increase for doctors, and for the disruptive impact of strikes.
Each five-day walkout by resident doctors costs the NHS approximately £250 million to £300 million.

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