
As the latest round of unnecessary strikes come to an end, I have written to the BMA Resident Doctors Committee asking to meet the whole committee. It’s time for the BMA to be realistic and reasonable about what the country and the NHS can afford.
Save CRH
42K posts


As the latest round of unnecessary strikes come to an end, I have written to the BMA Resident Doctors Committee asking to meet the whole committee. It’s time for the BMA to be realistic and reasonable about what the country and the NHS can afford.


The government used 1000 additional specialty training posts "as leverage and has stymied the pipeline of future consultants and GPs. This approach not only penalises doctors but ultimately harms patients." @DrLukeCraddock on the resident doctor strike bmj.com/content/393/bm…


‘NOT THE NHS AGAIN!’ We debunk Palantir in the #NHS Email your MP to ask them to come to the April 16 debate on Palantir & the FDP foxglove.org.uk/campaigns/pala… Full episode youtu.be/Uosu3R4Q5gY?si…


A band 7 Physician Assistant straight out of uni working in London is paid £58.133 - £29.73 per hour They: ‼️Can’t prescribe drugs nor request X-rays ‼️Must have all of their work checked by a Dr ‼️Are dependent assistants & have no medical qualifications @fletchjack

DAUK responds to NHS England chief executive’s threat to reduce reliance on doctors dauk.org/dauk-responds-…

This is a HUGE victory for people power. After years of pressure, New York City Health + Hospital Corporation will not renew its contract with Palantir. When communities organise, even the most powerful corporations can be held to account. Activists in NYC just forced their health system to dump Palantir over human rights concerns. Now, it's our turn in the UK. Palantir’s contract with NHS England is up for renewal in February 2027. This shows we can win. But we need YOU. Join the campaign: amn.st/6018B6dPQq


Panorama gathered evidence that PAs were not being properly supervised at the Operose practice. The PAs told the undercover reporter they saw all sorts of patients, sometimes without any clinical supervision. The practice treated them as equivalent to GPs bbc.co.uk/news/health-61…





The suggested threat from @wesstreeting that additional speciality training posts for doctors could be withdrawn if doctors strike is extraordinary. Medical Consultants, Surgeons, GPs, anaesthetists, radiologists, and psychiatrists have to go through a speciality training post to finish their training. If you cut training posts, you are directly cutting the number of specialists the NHS will have in the future, that patients rely on. So what is being suggested here is essentially this: if doctors strike, the Government may reduce the number of future NHS specialists. That’s what the Health Secretary is suggesting. Doctors do not control how many training posts exist. The Government does. Workforce planning is a Government responsibility. The current bottlenecks, where tens of thousands of doctors apply for a limited number of training posts, were created by workforce planning decisions over many years. We already have a situation where tens of thousands of doctors apply for a limited number of training posts every year while the NHS says it has workforce shortages and patients face long waiting lists. The solution to that problem is obviously to train more specialists, not fewer. Using training posts as leverage in a dispute is not workforce planning. It is political pressure using the future NHS workforce as a bargaining chip. That should concern the public as much as it concerns doctors. Because fewer training posts today means fewer Consultants and GPs tomorrow. Fewer Consultants and GPs means longer waiting lists, overcrowded A&E departments, and worse access to care. Threatening to reduce training opportunities if doctors strike does not solve any of those problems. It just makes the workforce crisis worse. Training the future NHS workforce should never be used as a negotiating tool. bmj.com/content/392/bm…

A Health Secretary that threatens to withdraw training places for doctors when we are short of them and need more of them can't be trusted with the future of the NHS and shouldn't be in charge of it.

The UK health secretary, Wes Streeting, has vowed to withdraw promised extra specialty training places unless resident doctors call off their next strike bmj.com/content/392/bm…



Watch @WesStreeting's message to resident doctors in full following the BMA's latest pay package rejection.