Senior doctors in England have voted to accept an improved government pay deal, bringing to an end the year-long dispute which had led to strike action.
The British Medical Association (BMA), a trade union which has been representing the consultants, put the offer on pay and conditions to its members, with 83% voting in favour.
The pay deal includes changes to the review body on doctors’ and dentists’ remuneration (DDRB) and a 2.85% (£3,000) uplift for those who have been senior doctors for four to seven years, said the BMA.
The offer is in addition to the 6% awarded during the DDRB process last summer.
Strike action over the last two years has heaped more pressure on the NHS, where more than seven million patients remain on waiting lists for hospital treatment, leading to thousands of cancelled appointments and procedures.
It has also piled pressure on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of an expected election later this year, as polls suggest the Tory party is trailing heavily behind Labour.
He hailed the deal as “excellent news” for patients after admitting in February he had failed to cut NHS waiting lists – a key government pledge.
“The end of consultant strike action in the NHS is excellent news for patients. It will mean we can continue making progress towards our goal of cutting the waiting lists, which have now fallen for the fourth month in a row,” he said.
“Consultants perform a vital role at the heart of the NHS – I’m pleased they’ve accepted this deal, which is fair for them and fair for the taxpayer.”
While NHS nurses ended strike action last year following a pay deal, a long-running pay dispute with junior doctors, who staged a five-day strike in February, remains ongoing.
‘Without valuing doctors, we lose them’
Dr Vishal Sharma, who chairs the BMA consultants committee, said “at the heart of this dispute was our concern for patients and the future sustainability of the NHS”.
He described the consultants’ strike action as “unprecedented” following “years of repeated real-term pay cuts”.
Dr Sharma said “it’s now imperative that the DDRB utilises its independence to restore doctors’ pay and prevent any further disputes from arising”.
“We’ve reached this point not just through our tough negotiations with the government, but thanks to the resolve of consultants, who took the difficult decision to strike, and did so safely and effectively, on multiple occasions, sending a clear message that they would not back down,” he said.
He added: “Without valuing doctors, we lose them. Without doctors, we have no NHS and patients suffer.”
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Health and Social Care Secretary Victoria Atkins said the government’s offer was “fair and reasonable” and the deal eliminated the threat of further strikes.
She added: “Consultants will now be able to focus on providing the highest quality care for patients and we can consolidate our progress on waiting lists – which have fallen for the past four months.
“This deal directly addresses gender pay issues in the NHS and enhances consultants’ parental leave options – representing a fair deal for consultants, patients, and taxpayers.”
LONDON, ENGLAND – OCTOBER 02: Junior doctors and consultants picket outside University College Hospital at the beginning of a three day strike over pay, on October 02, 2023 in London, England. The 72-hour work stoppage is the second joint walkout by groups of junior doctors and NHS consultants who are members of the British Medical Association. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
NHS consultants have narrowly voted to reject the government’s latest pay offer.
In a huge blow to Rishi Sunak, the British Medical Association announced that 51% of its members who took part in a ballot had turned it down.
The BMA said: “The result demonstrates that consultants still have considerable concerns about the offer.”
Under the offer, the majority of consultants would have received a 12.8% rise, with others receiving a minimum of 6%.
“From the feedback members have given us it was clear that they thought it did not go far enough and as a result they did not have confidence that pay would be restored over future years,” the BMA said.
The government is already involved in a long-running dispute with junior doctors.
Shadow heath secretary Wes Streeting said: “Last week, Rishi Sunak was bragging that NHS doctors had accepted his pay offer. This vote shows he was trying to pull the wool over the public’s eyes.
“The NHS is in the second year of strikes. They have cost patients more than one million cancelled operations and appointments, and cost taxpayers £2 billion.
“It is long past time Rishi Sunak took personal responsibility and took charge of negotiations himself. The prime minister cannot continue to wash his hands of the crisis in the NHS.”