Hospital doctors in England hit out Wednesday at a perceived “brain drain” from the country’s state-funded National Health Service (NHS), as they began their longest strike action yet in a protracted pay battle.
Junior doctors — those below specialist, consultant level — started joining picket lines from 0700 GMT, as part of an initial 72-hour walkout to be followed by a further six-day strike from January 3.
The total nine-day action, a major escalation of their pay dispute, is aimed at pressuring health bosses and the government to offer a better deal by severely limiting services at the busiest time of year.
The doctors say they have been forced to maintain their industrial action, which began earlier this year, over a failure to address a host of issues, mostly related to years of below-inflation pay.
Various health workers, including consultants and nurses, have also held walkouts since last year, but deals have since been reached with many. The junior doctors remain holdouts, however.
“Many doctors are leaving the NHS in their thousands to go to Australia and New Zealand which is leaving rota gaps,” Sumi Manirajan, 29, a junior doctor on a picket line at University College London Hospital told AFP.
“This means that doctors are getting burnt out to make ends meet.”
Joseph Kendall, a psychiatry doctor also on the picket line, echoed the point, arguing “our social contract has been torn up” as pay issues prompt growing numbers of colleagues to work overseas.
“There’s a massive brain drain ongoing and with the massive amount of debt that’s incurred by doctors, there’s a real sense of abandonment by the country,” he added.
Britain has been hit by walkouts across various sectors over the last two years, as decades-high inflation and a cost-of-living crisis led staff in to demand pay rises to keep up with spiralling prices.