Senior doctors say their take home pay has declined (Picture: PA)
Senior NHS doctors across England start voting today on whether to strike over pay.
Talks with the government to try and resolve the long-running dispute have been had but a deadlock remains, says chair of the BMA consultants committee Dr Vishal Sharma.
‘We have seen our take-home pay decline by 35% since 2008/9 and this is even before the impact of this year’s soaring inflation has been considered,’ he said, speaking on behalf on consultants.
‘As a result of this, consultants are now effectively working four months of the year for free.
‘Even as late as this weekend, we remained hopeful that we would secure a pay offer that went some way toward making up for the decline we have seen.’
But, he said, with inflation remaining in ‘double digits’ the final offer from the government still represented a pay cut in real-terms.
Dr Sharma added: ‘On the back of 15 years of our pay declining, we simply could not accept a deal that continued this downward trend and have been left with no option but to proceed today with the ballot for industrial action.’
He said consultants did not want to take industrial action, adding: ‘Ultimately the government made a political choice to cut our pay again this year and unless we can secure a commitment that the government will take the necessary steps to restore our pay over the long term, we simply cannot accept an offer that sees our pay fall even further.’
Dr Sharma has previously said the ‘NHS is on its knees’ and ‘senior doctors are cutting their hours or leaving the NHS in droves, driven out of jobs they love by unfair pension tax rules and brutal cuts to their pay’.
The ballot is open from Monday until June 27 and the BMA is urging members to vote yes.
The vote follows a series of strikes over pay this year by NHS ambulance staff, nurses and junior doctors.
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Talks with the government remain in a deadlock.