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BMA agrees to fresh junior doctor action Junior doctors plan week of all-out strikes
(about 1 hour later)
Junior doctors in England will take part in fresh industrial action over a new contract that ministers are imposing on them, union leaders say. Junior doctors in England will take part in five consecutive days of strikes next month as they ramp up their opposition to a new contract.
The British Medical Association leadership has sanctioned renewed action after members rejected the deal brokered between the union and government earlier this year. The British Medical Association took the step after members rejected the deal brokered between the union and government earlier this year.
The BMA has said members felt it did not do enough to reward those who work the most weekends and there was strong opposition to the fact that it was being forced on them. The all-out strikes will take place from 08:00 BST to 17:00 BST from 12 to 16 September with more dates to follow.
Details of what form the industrial action will take is expected soon. Confidential papers drawn up by the BMA have suggested there could be five-day strikes each month for the rest of the year. The government said the move would be damaging to patients.
But the union said members felt the contract which is being imposed on them did not do enough to reward those who work the most weekends and there was strong opposition to the fact that it was being forced on them.
Confidential papers drawn up by the BMA have suggested there could be five days of strikes each month for the rest of the year.
The imposed contractThe imposed contract
Junior doctors' row: The basics of the disputeJunior doctors' row: The basics of the dispute
The announcement reignites the long-running and bitter dispute. Junior doctors have taken part in six days of strikes this year, including two all-out stoppages.The announcement reignites the long-running and bitter dispute. Junior doctors have taken part in six days of strikes this year, including two all-out stoppages.
Industrial action was put on hold in May when the two sides got back round the table at conciliation service Acas.Industrial action was put on hold in May when the two sides got back round the table at conciliation service Acas.
That resulted in a new contract being agreed, which BMA leaders encouraged members to accept.That resulted in a new contract being agreed, which BMA leaders encouraged members to accept.
But when it was put to the vote, 58% of medics rejected it, prompting the resignation of the BMA junior doctor leader Johann Malawana and ministers to once again announce they would impose the new terms and conditions. But when it was put to the vote, 58% of medics rejected it, prompting the resignation of the BMA junior doctor leader Johann Malawana, and ministers to once again announce they would impose the new terms and conditions.
The first doctors are due to go on to the new contract in October. A new junior doctor leader, Dr Ellen McCourt, was appointed and, in August, she agreed with other junior doctors at the BMA that there was a desire for more industrial action after internal polling of members showed they wanted to continue the fight, paving the way for Wednesday's announcement.
A new junior doctor leader, Ellen McCourt, has been appointed and in August she agreed with other junior doctors at the BMA that there was a desire for more industrial action after internal polling of members showed they wanted to continue the fight. Dr McCourt said action was being taken as the contract, which will start being rolled out in October, "fails to treat all doctors fairly".
That request has now been accepted by the BMA's governing council. "The government has consistently said this is about creating a seven-day NHS, when junior doctors already work weekends and it's been shown that the government has no answer to how it will staff and fund extra weekend care.
"With just weeks before the first group of doctors is moved onto the imposed contract, time is running out. This contract will be in place for many years, it will have a direct impact on patient care and whether we can attract and keep enough doctors in the NHS. It is too important to be rushed to meet a political deadline.
"We have a simple ask of the government: stop the imposition. If it agrees to do this, junior doctors will call off industrial action."
A Department of Health spokesman said: "As doctors' representatives, the BMA should be putting patients first not playing politics in a way that will be immensely damaging for vulnerable patients.
"What's more, the BMA must be the first union in history to call for strike action against a deal they themselves negotiated and said was a good one."
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