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Might not be 🙁
I'd be surprised if they replaced him.
The whole JD fiasco is in full swing now and Hunt is the fall guy if it all collapses.
Doesn't make much sense to drag another minister down with him.
(Note how careful Cameron was to stay clear of the whole thing even when it was all over the news).
Oddly BBC now saying he isn't going 😕
Great shame she didn't give health to Bojo. That would have finished him off and would have been fun to watch.
Bollocks. He's staying.
Well the next set of strikes have been announced 1 week of walk out 8am to 5pm, mid September
The BMA Junior Docs negotiating team includes Aaron Borbora and Yannis Goursoyannis. Both spoke at the National Shop Stewards event 2 weeks ago where they reportedly pledged to work with the RMT and other unions advocating a new winter of discontent in public services and an effort to bring down the government. Presumably at that point Corbyn will become PM and we won't have to worry about health service funding because the country will be completely broke.
Most of the Junior Docs simply don't know who is fighting their corner or the blatant political agenda at play - despite the BMA constitution being a-political... They are trusting the BMA to act responsibly.
Whilst the Junior Docs have voiced their concerns the real agenda at play isn't what many of them believe it to be - it's shamelessly political. We know from the leak of messages reported in the Health Service Journal that there was always an intent to use 'safety' as a front to provoke the government into imposing the contract and thus creating the grounds for a 'justified' strike.
http://www.itv.com/news/2016-05-26/whatsapp-leak-reveals-truth-of-doctors-pay-strategy-in-dispute/
is that the same negotiating team who recommended the settlement to the members that the members then rejected and then they did as the mebers asked?
Jesus these Trots in momentum are damn clever - or you are talking complete tory bollocks
the blatant political agenda at play
I think we can see it your posts are incredibly blatant
The Health Service Journal though also noted the messages showed no evidence of the Government's consistent claims of a left-wing bias among the JDC, with a range of political views expressed within the group.
from your link that showed the shameless way they were being politically manipulated.
Jesus christ if you must misrepresent the facts FFS dont then cite an article that contradicts your point.
Sunday Times 21st August;
At an NSSN meeting in London last month, Yannis Gourtsoyannis, a member of the British Medical Association (BMA) junior doctors’ committee, spoke under a banner saying: “Link up all the strikes. Organise to take on the Tories. Get all the Tories out.”Dr Gourtsoyannis said: “Building links between our unions is vital. Now is the time to ramp things up. We need to defend Corbyn and show the government the door.”
So not at all political then.
AT least you did not have the cheek to argue your cited article supported your argument even if you wish to plow on with your polemic
[b] a range of political views expressed within the group.[/b]
Feel free to only focus on one and pretend its the actual view as you make your totally apolitical point 🙄
Another jr doctor leaving do at our place tomorrow, and another bright young doctor heading to Australia
Jeremy Hunt is doing a sterling job, pretty soon there will be no doctors left to go on strike
(J5mins, maybe you should actually speak to some jr docs, they are well aware that the NHS is in the grip of a staffing crisis and pushing for this 7 day cover and removing automatic progression for those doing research etc will only make it worse as more docs had to places where they can actually see their families)
the core issue is that the key professionals are well paid, mobile and in demand this enables them to demand employment conditions
as service demand isn't going to decrease, and as demographic of the workforce means more go part time and pension reforms shorten careers we are essentially stuffed
as such I would just pay them lots more money and take them out of the pension tax regime,
there isn't any other answer
and pay for it with a new tax add on to VAT
Of course it's political- any suggestion on how an argument with the government can ever [i]not[/i] be political? Especially when the dispute is entirely down to political posturing from the employer.
@just5 quite predictable - co-ordinated Union action to bring down a government. How very 1960's how very Corbyn. To give the doctors the benefit of the doubt you'd hope Yannis is in the minority.
All very confusing, doctors agree, bma reject, bma accept, doctors reject. Collective bargaining chaos 😐
Time for an end to a single service provider and employer ? No right to strike for single service industries ?
In the end they will revert to bullying the poor thick and vulnerable. Showing up their inept defenders on the bear-baiting box for the public's pleasure.
big n daft has nailed the problem at the other end of the career path.
Capricious and stupid reorganisations of services, negative rhetoric and workload are pushing Consultants to retire early, or work only for private providers.
In GP land where we have Pensions which are [i]not [/i]final salary, and are the sum of our contributions, pensions tax changes to the annual and lifetime allowances are encouraging many to retire or go part-time earlier than they might.
Very poor whole system thinking...
You cannot run a service without the consent of the employees and we have a a number of large problems here
1. Its pretty easy for a doctor to leave the Uk and get work.
2. It takes along time to train them so drift is a real problem.
3. We spent a lot of money on them to train them.
I see no easy solution here as both sides are pretty entrenched in their views and not keen on a compromise
JY, they also now end up with huge personal student debt, have lower starting salaries in real terms than in my day, and from the first day they are working are also providing a necessary service as well as being trained... as after all, if they were just being trained, the service would run better wihtout them being there...
But I cannot see an easy solution either. 🙁
STP is going to make Jrs protests look like a kids party.
I'm now genuinely confused as the BMA are calling for strike action against a deal they negotiated and said was a good one.
What I find galling about the current strikes is:
a) the pretence it isn't about pay. It is. It isn't anything to do with saving patients and the NHS. If they were upfront and said that they deserved more money than they receive then I'd understand. Nothing worse than a veneer of morality for those who can see through it.
b) the pretence it isn't holding patients lives to ransom. It is. If the strikers were prepared to say, 'yes, you can't manage without us and this is how strong our negotiating position is - look a dead person' then at least I'd be able to assess their position and agree or disagree.
c) the pretence it isn't a fashionable Tory-hating agenda.
As it is, the strikers are losing the moral high ground and are acting like the childish people who disagree with the referendum result, the independence result, the Tories at the last G.E. ...
it is about pay, but its the incentives to work weekends and rotas are so stretched already that are a major issue, reducing it to 'just about pay' misses the pointa) the pretence it isn't about pay.
plenty of 'on strike' jr doctors will end up working through itb) the pretence it isn't holding patients lives to ransom.
have you met many doctors? id say they are naturally quite right wing, often privately educatedc) the pretence it isn't a fashionable Tory-hating agenda
makecoldplayhistory - MemberI'm now genuinely confused as the BMA are calling for strike action against a deal they negotiated and said was a good one.
Simple really; the BMA enact the wishes of their members. They negotiated a deal, they put it to the ballot, the voters said no, so now the BMA proceed on that behalf.
it's nothing like refusing to accept the referendum result; in fact it's [i]exactly[/i] the same as the government recommending remain, but then when the vote comes in for brexit, progressing with brexit.
If they were upfront and said that they deserved more money
Have they [i]ever[/i] said this? Last I checked the pay argument was:
"We're doing too much already, please don't remove the safeguards preventing us from being made to do even more, whilst simultaneously reducing pay for some of the hours that we will inevitably be forced to work."
I assume they are not more upfront about that ^ argument as even that would get spun into 'greedy doctors' by a the majority of the media 🙄
Aside from the abhorrence I have for the current trend towards apocalyptic levels of spin, what does the Govt expect public servants to do when faced with an employer demanding acceptance of major changes and suggesting negotiation is limited to minor issues only? As a taxpayer I want sensible fiscal control but not at the expense of a Govt taking a morally redundant stance that no other employer could. Especially when it concerns fundamental services.
No right to strike
Yeah - imposing a punitive contract on a vital highly skilled profession for which there is a global demand. What could possibly go wrong?
If they were upfront and said that they deserved more money
Christ not that [i]again[/i].
How many times has it been pointed out on this thread that: [b]AT NO POINT DURING THE DISPUTE HAVE JUNIOR DOCTORS ASKED FOR [i]MORE[/i] MONEY[/b] ?!?
One source of the original dispute (before everyone got so entrenched) was that they didn't want [b][i]less[/i][/b] money for doing the same job. That's rather different, no?
And while you're talking about "pretence", I heard Jeremy Hunt on the radio this morning saying he had "bent over backwards" to resolve this , that everything was up for negotiation if only they'd come to the table.
Anyone who has been following this dispute knows that is complete spin and almost the exact opposite to his approach of [url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/jeremy-hunt-refuses-to-return-to-negotiations-over-contract-after-meeting-junior-doctor-protesters-a6986451.html ]refusing further negotiations[/url] and [url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/junior-doctors-strike-bma-tells-jeremy-hunt-walk-outs-will-be-scrapped-if-contract-imposition-halted-a6991101.html ]refusing to cancel the contract imposition to avoid strikes[/url].
FWIW though, as I said earlier, I think the Junior Doctors are unwise to resort to further strikes. It is far too easy to spin that against them (which is why Jeremy is suddenly playing the victim instead of the hardline enforcer).
How many times has it been pointed out on this thread that: AT NO POINT DURING THE DISPUTE HAVE JUNIOR DOCTORS ASKED FOR MORE MONEY ?!?
Well that would come as news to the Chair of the BMA Junior Doctors Committee at the time of the negotiations last year - Johann Malawana. He discussed conceding the weekend pay issue if the government [u]increased [/u]the total medical pay bill for Junior Doctors by £500m-£700m.
Good lord, you mean Junior Doctors' Committee privately discussed the possible compromises?
What utter bastards eh? It's like they didn't even want to strike.
The whole deal has always been cost neutral, with no more money overall to Drs, just shifting money away for those who provide the 24 hour NHS, removing effective protection from them, making it more difficult for women with career breaks etc etc
I'm not sure the decision to strike was brilliant though given all the other political stuff going on. But I do know there is huge bad feeling towards JH throughout the NHS, with no chance of him building support and it is gobsmacking he wasn't moved in the reshuffle.
Graham -
It's like they didn't even want to strike.
I believe that of its members but not of union officials themselves.
AT NO POINT DURING THE DISPUTE HAVE JUNIOR DOCTORS ASKED FOR MORE MONEY ?!?
Yet, they have. As [i]The Spectator[/i] put it,
[i]"But beneath the sanctimonious proclamations of moral superiority lurked an eternal truth: it was just about cash. Cold, hard, cash. And, of course, politics. [u]There’s nothing wrong with that[/u] but it’s as well to be honest about such things. Something to remember next time."[/i]
underlining by me
@Stoatsbrother - I suspect that it isn't so much JS leading a witch hunt against Jr. Doctors and the wider NHS and more that there's a lack of money and someone needs to become unpopular.
@Whoever suggested I don't know many Drs. Related to some. Went to Uni with many. Champagne socialists I'd say, who come from more right-of-centre families.
from J5M's spectator link
However, Dr Malawana discussed conceding the weekend pay issue if the government increased the medical pay bill by £500m-£700m ... Well fancy that! It’s amazing how cash can improve patient safety
Course, rather than buying old Johann and his chums each a yacht in the Caribbean, that increase might mean having MORE doctors - say, to get nearer to properly staffing hospitals during those critical weekend periods when currently patients are all left to die in forgotten corners of darkened rooms.
I am certain the JD's have been very careful not to directly ask for more money. If it wasn't about money at least in part the BMA wouldn't have added a pay calculator to their site.
DrJ we need multiple employers, if Doctors don't like one they can move to another. The issue is having a single employer providing essential services and a right to strike. Doctors can have one or the other but not both imo.
As I have posted before medical school is hugely over subscribed, there is a very long list of people who want to be Doctors and have the skills to do so but can't get a place to study.
The Government wants to improve the service and have offered more money to do so. The Doctors don't think they've been offered enough of a payrise to work more weekends and nights.
Maybe but that doesn't help if whoever qualifies then becomes an emigrant due to better working conditions elsewhereAs I have posted before medical school is hugely over subscribed, there is a very long list of people who want to be Doctors and have the skills to do so but can't get a place to study.
... unless you're suggesting we train loads of extra ones to make up for that "wastage"
Don't we have multiple employers ie. NHS or the private secotr. That's ignoring alternate employers such as a previous poster's friend off to Aus?
My wife and I weren't happy with working in government schools in the UK. We now live in Asia and are happy to do so. I'd see the Dr and teacher market as being pretty similar in this analogy.
we need multiple employers,
No what we need is a health secretary committed to making the NHS work better and not pursue a confrontational strategy to further his own ideological goals. The issue of a right to strike didn't arise before and the only reason it does so now is that JH has totally lost any credibility as an honest negotiator.
#jambylogicfail
The Government have not as yet offered more money. they have shifted it [i]away [/i]from those who work at nights and weekends.
If there was more than one employer then the government might be more justified in playing hardball. There isn't, so they should be extra careful not to be high-handed and try to be fair. But they have lied about capacity to deliver their version of a "24 hour NHS" when, not only is there not the capacity to achieve it, but their justification is based on repeated and wilful misinterpretations of the evidence.
Medicine is indeed over-subscribed and it is attitudes like JHs and yours Jamby that mean lots of younger Drs don't stay on and move into other realms.
Trouble is you can't know who is going to put up with the rubbish Junior Drs have to put up at 27, when sifting applicants aged 17...
But since [i]you [/i]applaud people who don't like the changes in Ts&Cs exercising their choice and walking away, you obviously don't mind waiting the 10 years it takes someone from entering medical school to being a really autonomously practicing Dr and would like medical School entry expanded by - say - 20% - even though the cost of doing that might easily pay for giving the current Junior Drs a decent deal and fixing the problem now?!
facepalm.
The Government wants to improve the service
Anyone who works in the NHS might take issue with that statement; you don't improve services by cutting funding (in real terms, you know, when things get more expensive, your pocket money needs to go up to compensate...) nor do you improve the service by holding down wages and then capping agency work, while asking more from everyone.
The NHS is being run down by a media savvy, ideologically driven, politically motivated government. They, like you, have no alternative plan for the provision of healthcare to the population.
Don't we have multiple employers ie. NHS or the private secotr
Yes and no.
There are some privately run hospitals badged as NHS like this one (not sure about pay, but not as qualified/experienced)
http://www.barlboroughtreatmentcentre.nhs.uk/
Some consultants own private hospitals, or lease space in them, but you can not do that as a junior doctor. (used to be big money, but not so much these days unless you want to work 7 days a week 12+hrs a day)
And there are increasing numbers of doctors work for agency. (better paid than NHS staff)
Jamba - this year for the first time ever there were places for medicine through clearing - applications are falling - admittedly slowly.
Working more nights and weekends - not that simple - most rotas now rely on locums to provide current levels of staff as not enough doctors. More weekend work would simply mean less doctors Monday to Friday and/or more locums as staffing levels are already stretched in many places.
The contract dispute has unfortunately come at a time when morale has been falling for many years, and it is no doubt in part the handling of the whole thing and not just the contract itself that is the issue.
They, like you, have no alternative plan for the provision of healthcare to the population.
I disagree with that statement. I think they know exactly what they are doing. They are preparing the way for full privatisation by driving down the cost of all sections of the NHS.
When things have got that bad that there are no doctors, too many patients and cost have been artificially driven low, then the only solution left will be for private insurance to come in, and private organisations take over what is left
The Government wants to improve the service and have offered more money to do so. The Doctors don't think they've been offered enough of a payrise to work more weekends and nights.
Where is the extra money they have offered? Training posts have been removed, pay rates are being capped. As above all areas of the NHS (and social services) are being asked to save money, and being penalised if they do not. In real terms money invested is going down, plus usage is going up
Whoever suggested I don't know many Drs. Related to some. Went to Uni with many. Champagne socialists I'd say, who come from more right-of-centre families.
I'm married to one. Yeah maybe we are probably both "champagne socialists" given that we are middle-class, but don't vote Tory. Neither do her parents (retired Scientist/Lecturer/Ofsted Inspector and a retired Teacher).
If it wasn't about money at least in part the BMA wouldn't have added a pay calculator to their site.
The (flawed) calculator was for them to calculate how much money they would [i]LOSE[/i] under the new contract - not how much [i]more[/i] they could ask for.
DrJ we need multiple employers, if Doctors don't like one they can move to another.
Privatisation in other words? Well that's certainly on the cards and is something that many junior doctors are very concerned about.
But if the government want to privatise then they need to come out and say that so we can have an open public debate about it - not do it by stealth whilst slowly dismantling the NHS.
As I have posted before medical school is hugely over subscribed
But unfortunately that is translating into a surplus of doctors. The NHS remains hugely understaffed in almost every speciality. Spend ten minutes looking at any hospital rota and you'll understand that.
The Government wants to improve the service and have offered more money to do so. The Doctors don't think they've been offered enough of a payrise to work more weekends and nights.
I hate to say #jambafact but that isn't true. If you've read this thread or followed the dispute then you know that isn't true.
Even the government repeatedly claimed that the contract was a cost-neutral change and that doctors would somehow (magically?) work less hours but provide more cover.
DrJ we need multiple employers, if Doctors don't like one they can move to another. The issue is having a single employer providing essential services and a right to strike. Doctors can have one or the other but not both imo.
That certainly got rid of railway strikes. Wait...
I hate to say #jambafact but that isn't true.
I'm amazed that people here are still trying to correct jambabollox. He is a looney.
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Do you have any children you'd like to cover?