Showing posts with label industrial action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label industrial action. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

I vote for Jexit

Please see below extremely lazy buzzfeed-like sumamry post, a few choice images recycled from my facebook and twitter feeds.


 


Jeremy Hunt has to go.
The last two days have seen further junior doctor industrial action: full walkout of junior doctor support including emergency cover including A+E, the crash team, ITU, obstetrics and so on.

Contrary to the scaremongering from the hateful daily mail there have been absolutely no patient safety issues, obviously, as the care was expertly provided by experienced and dedicated consultants and allied healthcare professionals. And we are extremely grateful for their support.

And despite hostile sections of the media it is clear that patients and the public are largely supportive of the doctors. Whilst on-call last weekend an 85 year old gentleman I was seeing in resus with a fast irregular heart rate stopped my examination to ask whether I also supported the " young doctors sticking it to that nasty Mr Hunt".

On the picket line I attended this morning we received numerous heartening beeps from passing cars, buses and ambulances. Several of people came to talk to us and express their support, and it was also nice to see some very british members of the public awkwardly display nods and thumbs ups whilst walking past. An old man with a frame stopped across the road and applauded. Several consultants and members of the public also came by with donations of gratefully received food and hot drinks.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/the-public-increasingly-blame-the-government-for-the-junior-doctors-strike-a7003056.html



The NHS is already straining under the current contract. There are not enough doctors to fill rotas, making each shift more stressful for the few doctors that work them. Having recently moved onto a medical job I can report that 0/4 of my 12 hour on call days had a full complement of medical staff; the remaining team were rushed off their feet to try and see all the ward medical problems and new admissions. 

This is a genuine junior doctor rota (names erased) from a different hospital. The boxes in yellow are represent shifts where there is currently no doctor allocated. These extra shifts are frequently advertised as locum jobs but without much success - it is unpleasant to work under such short staffed conditions and there is increased risks of making mistakes. Junior doctors are already tired from working 50+ hours a week and value their free time. New government policy to cap the hourly rate of such locum shifts removes any small remaining incentive to work further hours.



Jeremy Hunt frequently claims (lies) about increasing funding for the NHS, when actually it is facing real terms cuts. He expects to make doctors work harder and longer in the context of £20billion worth of "efficiency savings".  source


It is clear that a treacherous and callous government is taking a heavy heavy toll on junior doctor's morale.


GP satisfaction in the UK is plummeting. More and more (junior and senior) doctors are leaving - no sign of those 5000 promised new GPs.




 - and may indeed be illegal according to Britain's equality watchdog.



The tactic seems to be to grossly underfund and destabilise the NHS to set the scene for private companies to rescue the profitable parts - this sneak privatisation is already happening and has been hastened by the conservative's 2012 health and social care act (then health secretary lansley responsible for this act now advises private companies how to profit from the NHS). 

Remember Jeremy Hunt himself co-wrote a book about how to privatise the health service. The NHS is paid for by generations of UK taxpayers and is valued most by the poorest and most vulnerable - the people who could not afford private health care (and the people who are unlikely to vote conservative.) It does not belong to the political elite and it is not theirs to sell.



Despite, and perhaps partly because of, the ongoing pressures facing the health service Junior doctors remain positive. Jeremy Hunt has inadvertently strengthened the profession as we unite against his government's abuses of the public sector. There is rekindled camaraderie amongst colleagues of different specialties, junior and senior, doctors and other healthcare workers standing together passionate in their defence of a world class free health service that is adequately funded, and fair for patients and staff. 

Picket line in Manchester April 26th 2016




Appendix
A good, simple explanation of the main concern:



Tuesday, 1 December 2015

On not striking

Today I went to work. I do this most days, but my arrival today was unexpected because this day I had planned to participate in a strike that the vast majority of junior doctors in England had voted for.

It was made clear by the BMA that this industrial action was a last resort. Doctors have never wanted to strike but we have been backed into a corner by a destructive health secretary unilaterally imposing a cruel and damaging contract on the medical workforce. The BMA balloted its members for industrial action and obtained phenomenal support from doctors collectively appalled at the decisions of central government. 

98% of those who voted (76% of those eligible, so 74.5% overall) said they would support strike action, a massive mandate for change and a clear sign, from those who know, that the government should re-examine their actions. The accusation that the BMA is merely a small band of "militant doctors" has been soundly disproved - essentially all doctors are willing to strike to prevent further erosion to doctor's conditions, ultimately to defend the NHS as we know it.

Compare this mandate with that of our government who received 36.9% of the vote, of 66.1% of the electorate: only 24.4% of the electorate gave their consent for the conservatives to vandalise our health service.

At the last moment the day before the strike Jeremy Hunt agreed to the BMA's conditions; lifting (temporarily) the threat of imposing a new contract and returning to meaningful negotiations via Acas. This was needlessly late in the day as there have been many, many occasions for the government to listen to the legitimate concerns of nearly all doctors.

I disagree with some of my colleagues who feel let down by the BMA. Some are angrily cancelling their memberships and have accused the BMA of weakness. Striking after receiving a reasonable truce would have been counter-productive in the extreme, leaving doctors open to accusations of greed and callousness. Striking is not our goal, it is our last resort tool in the struggle for a fair contract - its misuse would be very damaging to the public's perception of the profession and to our cause overall.  Right now I think we retain both the upper hand and the moral high ground. We're winning, and Jeremy Hunt knows it - so he continues to cast doctors as villains, openly lies and attempts to divide us to weaken our resolve. Not going on strike is a good outcome at this point. Not least because we save our innocent colleagues and patients from some inevitable and regrettable hardship and inconvenience.

Of course I would have enjoyed the novelty of standing at a picket line rather than enduring the often tedious and menial tasks I perform on the ward. I wanted to express the righteous indignation and fully demonstrate my depth of feeling for the profession and for the NHS.
And of course I still think Jeremy Hunt is a dishonest, smug, odious tosser and I don't trust his treacherous grinning weasel face with any aspect of managing the nation's health. 

But there's a much bigger picture: Doctors (and the health service and public sector as a whole) must remain united, dedicated and utterly professional in the struggle for fair treatment and the continued existence of the NHS. We have been gracious enough to give Hunt's first offer of conciliation the benefit of the doubt but if his arrogance continues we have the legal and moral mandate to strike in January.

Doctors feel attacked and denigrated, they have united to express this view and the secretary of state has been made to listen. The threat of imposing the new contract has been lifted for now, yet we maintain our mandate for industrial action should talks break downs. The most effective strike is one we don't have to do (yet).



Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Doctors strike: what's all the fuss about?

From the point of view of an internet-generation junior doctor the level of awareness, anger and coverage of the DDRB contract proposals is overwhelming (DDRB is the Review Body on Doctors' and Dentists' Renumeration, advises the government on rates of pay). Years of frustration are finally being vented across social media sites and articulate and human arguments for fair working conditions and for the survival of the NHS are commonplace.

Until recently the discussion has been largely restricted to junior doctors themselves, various websites and forums becoming an echo chamber for doctors to agree with one another, preaching a familiar message to a choir who are already well aware of the issues and who are more than ready to reply with similar stories and personal perspectives, and occasionally this can breed an element of oversimplification, hysteria, or hyperbole, particularly as the issues are a little too complicated to be adequately summarised in a tweet or hashtag. However this hotpot of energy and anger is spilling over and is now beginning to be reported by the national mainstream media. There have been issues in expressing this anger in an understandable and constructive way but we are beginning to find a common voice. 

Manchester Picadilly Gardens last night- pic by Manchester junior Dr Jeremy Lyen

Last night I attended a march in central Manchester, forming part of a slightly smaller but no less passionate crowd than the 5,000 in London the previous evening. It was moving to see so many doctors and medical students united in the campaign, and it was excellent to see the support from the public. It marks the beginning of a campaign to make doctor’s issues well known, and to highlight the direct threat to patients and the NHS. Some form of industrial action in the next few weeks seems inevitable and it is absolutely essential that the public are aware of why doctors feel this is the only path forward. Without the backing of patients and the public any strike will further alienate and vilify doctors and pave the way for the profession and the NHS to be dismantled.

To that end I feel obligated to highlight some key points that may not be obvious to people outside of medicine. The grievances of doctors are multiple and complex so what follows is merely a heavily simplified personal take on the main issue – the BMA website is a good place to start for more details, or the facebook page of any junior doctor. I want to clarify 1) what a junior doctor is 2) why the contract is unfair for doctors and 3) why it is poisonous for patients and the NHS.

The BMA is the union that represents doctors in the UK, and took the uneasy decision (backed by members) to walk away from junior doctor contract negotiations after several discussions, realising that the proposals were neither safe nor fair, and were not a position from which an acceptable contract could be negotiated from. The government plan to impose this new contract on junior doctors in England (not Scotland or Wales) from August 2016. The current vocabulary is misleading, and poorly understood even by other medical staff including consultants. A “junior” doctor is a qualified graduate from medical school undertaking postgraduate training in hospitals or the community. The term includes the very bottom (yours truly) foundation doctors, but also any doctor in training that is not a consultant or GP. Virtually every doctor under 35-40 will be a junior doctor. The label “junior” sticks even if you are in your ST8 year of surgery training or have taken time out of the training programme for example to do research, change specialty or do voluntary work. It is very likely to be a “junior” doctor that performs your elective surgery or resuscitates you in A+E or sees you in clinic. These doctors, from new “juniors” (F1) to experienced “juniors” (senior registrars), make up about 40% of all doctors working in the country and all stand to suffer at the hand of new contract changes.

The contract fundamentally changes the way doctors are paid. People may need medical attention at any time of the day and on any day of the week. The NHS is straining but it is providing a 7 day service 24 hours a day. The current government has allowed misinformation to be spread such that patients now fear hospitals at the weekend. At present junior doctors receive a basic salary that rises with experience, and receive a supplement on top of this if their rota involves a lot of night shifts or weekend work. The new contract redefines “social” hours” as 7am-10pm six days a week, so rotas involving working evenings and/or all day Saturday would attract no increase in pay compared to a  9-5. The new contract would increase the basic pay but slash the unsocial work supplement such that doctors working in more acute specialties (already unenvied and overworked doctors such as in A+E, hospital medicine or ITU) may end up with a 15-40% pay cut whilst doctors with more normal hours may have a modest increase - but are at risk of seeing their rotas suddenly becoming much more antisocial without increase in pay. Almost every recommendation of the DDRB contract proposal is worse for junior doctors, and is therefore directly toxic to the NHS as a whole.

It would be dishonest to suggest that a strike is “not about the pay”, because no sane person would be willing to accept such a pay cut – particularly not if they had already been silently suffering a pay freeze/de-facto pay cut for several years (15% less than 2007 in real terms). The current system also does not seem to recognise the increased amount of unpaid overtime (>5hrs/week on average), self funded training, BMA/GMC/royal college membership costs, compulsory medical insurance, spiraling university debt (36K for 4 years tuition alone), or essential, expensive and difficult postgraduate exams. The public perception remains that doctors are well paid, and the well-heeled, golf-playing, Mercedes-driving doctor is a persistent one. This cliche is probably true for a small minority, especially a small number of hard working and very experienced consultants that may supplement their NHS income with private practice. But it is not true of the current generations of doctors in training.  In truth junior doctors at the moment are paid more than the average UK worker, and pay does increase with experience.  There have been several unhelpful comparisons of doctors with the perceived circumstances of other workers. In my opinion it does not help to compare with tube drivers, retail workers, McDonald's managers or physicians associates, as these workers have their own grievances and are of course also entitled to fair pay. Such comparisons serve only to perpetuate the idea that doctors are self-important and entitled: we stand to alienate ourselves from other professionals and the public, many of whom will (unfortunately for us) remain unconvinced that a junior doctor in their 20s or 30s is deserving of a salary that approximates their age in £K, no matter how many bleeding heart "open letter" accounts of their jobs they might read.

The wider issue however is the future of the NHS. In the short term patient safety is likely to be compromised as doctors working longer hours for less pay will be tired and demoralised. There will be more burn out and more mistakes. In the longer term these doctors will continue to leave the NHS in England. There is already a recruitment crisis in several specialties including GP and A+E. 20-50% of training positions in GP and A+E remain unfilled, yet somehow the government expects to attract even more doctors to these careers by making the job less satisfying and reducing the pay. About 60% of FY2s (second year post medical school) last year took a year or more out of training for various reasons and that number is sure to grow as more and more juniors are either forced out of the profession as they can no longer afford childcare or mortgage repayments, or realise that enough is enough; their skills and training are appreciated to a far greater extent outside of the NHS, outside of England or outside of the profession itself. NHS workers have been leaned on already. If the doctors don't stand up to the changes and fold then I am sure the bosses will go for other professionals. The NHS is suffering an insidious end by a  thousand cuts. If the contract is implemented as it is currently I foresee a slow and sad cycle of positive feedback as for each doctor that leaves the NHS leaves a slightly less tolerable atmosphere and workload for those remaining. Morale gets lower and patients are harmed, expensive locum and agency staff are required to fill the gaps and eventually the public will be led to conclude that the NHS has run its course and must be rescued by the private sector. 

I am deeply saddened that this is the situation I have found myself in after years of medical school and only two months in the job. It is a treasured privilege to work as a junior doctor and I am immensely proud to work for the NHS. And because I value both of these things I will be voting alongside thousands of my colleagues in favour of industrial action to protest these contract changes.