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UK hospitals in panic mode over doctors’ strike

Demonstrators hold placards including one that reads "Hunt must go", referring to British Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, during a protest by striking junior doctors outside the Department of Health in central London, April 6, 2016. (AFP photo)

British hospitals are taking “military level” contingency plans as thousands of junior doctors in the UK have walked off their jobs over a contract dispute, marking the first all-out strike in the history of the National Health Service (NHS).

The two-day strike began on Tuesday upon a call by the British Medical Association (BMA), and will affect almost all medical services, including accident and emergency, intensive care and maternity, all of which are disrupted for the first time over a long-running contract dispute.

The British government has proposed a contract which extends NHS services to seven days a week while reducing the pay for working on the weekend.

The last round of negotiations between the government and the BMA collapsed in January, prompting the government to announce that the contracts would be imposed in summer.

According to NHS England, "military level" contingency planning had been carried out to make sure urgent and emergency care remains unharmed.

More than 125,000 operations and appointments have so far been cancelled “to free up staff” during the walk-out.

Patients are being advised to think carefully about using the NHS during the strike and even a website has been set up to provide patients with details about available services where they live.

"Clearly industrial action of this type can put significant pressure on the NHS. We have been working with all hospitals to make sure they have plans in place to provide urgent and emergency care," said NHS England's Anne Rainsberry.

She emphasized that their plans were "robust" and hospitals were "confident" they could manage the situation.

This is while a recent BBC survey found that the majority of Britons side with the striking doctors despite the halt in all medical services.

Asked whether they supported junior doctors striking while not providing emergency cover, 57% of the participants said they would, compared to 26% who opposed.

UK Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt described the walk-off as "extreme" and warned it would be "deeply worrying for patients."

However, the BMA told the 45,000-strong population of striking doctors that they cannot be held responsible for any lives lost and should ignore pleas to return to work.


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