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Statement from the physician community on the BMA ballot for industrial action

The Faculty is proud to support the following statement, issued by the Royal College of Physicians, on the subject of the BMA ballot for industrial action. Read the full statement on the RCP website here.

With just over a week until the BMA ballot for industrial action closes, we as leaders of the physician community want to reiterate to our trainee colleagues that whatever choice you make – we support you. Our message is the same to consultants who will receive a consultative ballot later this month.

We fully respect the right of trade union members to go on strike. The decision to pursue industrial action is never easy and is likely to weigh particularly heavily on healthcare professionals. We want all our members to know that we will support whatever decision you make. While it is not within our remits to comment on pay negotiations, we will always speak up on behalf of doctors and our health and social care colleagues.

We know that many NHS doctors feel demoralised. They are working incredibly hard to manage the fallout from COVID-19 and to tackle the backlog. As a result of the intense pressure that those working in the health and care system are currently experiencing, some doctors are choosing to leave the profession and there is a real risk that we will lose more.

The Urgent and Emergency Recovery (UEC) plan published last week is yet another reminder that no matter how many strategies are published, all roads lead to workforce. We cannot recover the health service, deliver care sustainably or implement any new ways of working without enough staff.

Training more doctors is a crucial part of creating a more sustainable health service – but it will take time, and will be for nothing if we don’t take steps to also ensure that bright and ambitious students who begin their path to becoming an NHS doctor want to remain in the medical profession for the long-term. That is why solutions on retention for the here and now are vital. As a medical community we have long campaigned for an expansion of medical school and training places, set out recommendations for short-to-medium term workforce solutions, and pressed the government to publish a long-term workforce plan with the numbers of staff needed to meet demand. We will keep making the case for funding to underpin that strategy and for it to include a range of solutions on recruitment and retention.

Workforce is the biggest barrier to ensuring waiting times and lists fall and to people getting the timely, quality care they need. We are clearly not attracting and retaining enough healthcare professionals or taking enough care of the ones we have. It is vital that staff feel supported and valued, and we know pay and conditions are central to that.

The fact that doctors are even considering industrial action is a strong sign that the government must do more to invest in the NHS workforce now and for the long-term. As we have said, doctors couldn’t be expressing their concerns about the NHS workforce any more strongly. We want all our members to know that we support you and we hear you. We hope that the government is listening and that a solution is reached swiftly.

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