• About Us
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Client Portal
  • Contact Us
  • today headline
  • Write for us
Today Headline
No Result
View All Result
  • breaking news today
    • Politics news
    • Sports
    • Science News & Society
  • Entertainment News
    • Movie
    • Gaming
  • Technology News
    • Automotive
  • Health News
    • Lifestyle
    • Insurance
  • Finance News
    • Money
  • Enterprise
  • Contact Us
  • breaking news today
    • Politics news
    • Sports
    • Science News & Society
  • Entertainment News
    • Movie
    • Gaming
  • Technology News
    • Automotive
  • Health News
    • Lifestyle
    • Insurance
  • Finance News
    • Money
  • Enterprise
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
TodayHeadline
No Result
View All Result

NHS ‘cannot keep patients safe’ in strikes

December 20, 2022
in Politics news
Reading Time: 4 mins read
b34c4e52 embedded270336260 - TodayHeadline


NHS leaders cannot keep patients safe during strikes and there is “deep worry”, health chiefs have warned, as they urged the Prime Minister to reopen talks on pay.

In a last-minute intervention, Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, has written to Rishi Sunak requesting an end to the deadlock with unions who are striking over pay and conditions.

Thousands of nurses staged their second walkout over pay on Tuesday and paramedics and ambulance workers are getting ready to hold a strike on Wednesday.

In a letter to the PM, Mr Taylor said: “This is not something NHS leaders would ever say lightly, but many now tell us that they cannot guarantee patient safety tomorrow.

“On health grounds alone, it is clear we have entered dangerous territory.”

“Be prepared to negotiate”

Taylor urged the Prime Minister to end the Government’s dispute with the unions quickly, asking Mr Sunak to “be prepared to negotiate on the substantive issue of pay awards”.

The letter added: “With less than 24 hours to go to the ambulance strike, there is now deep worry among NHS leaders about the level of harm and risk that could occur to patients tomorrow and beyond.”

He added that it is rare to hear “such strong and urgent expressions of concern” from leaders running hospitals, ambulance services and other vital health services.

b34c4e52 embedded270336260 - TodayHeadline
PA

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme, Mr Taylor said: “We never want to alarm people but we have reached the stage where our leaders feel it’s necessary to say they cannot guarantee patient safety, they cannot avoid risks as these strikes unfold.

“We are particularly concerned about the ambulance workers’ strike tomorrow but we’re concerned about the possibility of further strikes.

“We need to make clear that we’re entering into a very dangerous time and this is why we’re upping even more our call to the Government and to the trade unions to try to find a way of solving this dispute and helping us get through the winter.”

He added: “We simply have to say that if the Government is not willing to negotiate on pay, then it looks as though negotiations will not take place, if negotiations do not take place, then industrial action will take place, then if industrial action takes place, there will be risk, there will be harm to patients.

“It’s simply our responsibility to make that absolutely clear to the public, to the politicians and to the trade unions.”

Pay

Unions representing ambulance workers are currently meeting Health Secretary Steve Barclay though the Government has indicated it will not shift on the issue of pay.

Earlier, Downing Street acknowledged that Mr Sunak had not chaired Cobra meetings on the crisis or met the unions.

At a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday the disputes with NHS nurses and paramedics were not raised, with discussions instead focusing on plans for the Coronation in May 2023.

Asked whether Mr Sunak should get personally involved in efforts to end the strikes, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “The Prime Minister is working very closely and being closely involved in the Government’s approach.

“But the fundamental approach of the Government has been to accept the recommendations of the independent pay review bodies, we don’t think it would be right to add the political element that having the Prime Minister directly involved would have.”

Elsewhere, Rachel Harrison, a national secretary at the GMB trade union, told MPs on the Health Committee that unless the Health Secretary is willing to talk about pay, ambulance strikes will go ahead.

Asked what will happen if the Government does not move on pay, she said: “Our members will be the ones that will decide… We will continue to say to the Government, ‘our door is open to talk about pay’.

“Our members will be the ones to decide on any pay offer that’s made and if no pay offer is forthcoming, we will continue to have that conversation next year as we head towards the next round of pay discussions as well.”

Ambulance response

Ambulance responses are split into categories, with category 1 being the most life-threatening such as cardiac arrest, while category 2 covers conditions like stroke, heart attack and sepsis.

Ms Harrison said category 1 would be covered by workers and suggested agreement has been reached in most areas on other categories.

She said: “Most agreements have now been signed off and we’re doing our role in communicating to our members what they are and encouraging them to adhere to the exemptions that have been put in place.”

Ms Harrison said that cover will vary by service, but she added: “We will do everything within our power to ensure that communities are safe during this action.

“The Government has to play their part, they have to come to the table and talk to us.”

Unite leader, Sharon Graham, said: “It’s time to call things by their real names.

“The unions have agreed to provide cover tomorrow for life-threatening emergencies (Category 1 cases) and serious cases like heart attack and stroke (Category 2 cases).

“That has been agreed at a host of local NHS trusts.

“Frankly, at best, the Government is misleading the public on this, and at worst deliberately scaremongering.”

Related: Government sues PPE Medpro over gowns contract

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Mother-of-two Sasha Walpole (pictured with her digger) claims Harry kissed her after asking her if she wanted to go outside for a cigarette during her 19th birthday party back in 2001

‘I’m the older woman who took Harry’s virginity’: Digger driver Sasha Walpole, 40, comes forward

ad82ba607d0c13d65db96f2dce77d5b2 - TodayHeadline

Foreign Office accused of resisting proscribing Iran’s Revolutionary Guard

riverside1316r - TodayHeadline

Why Broadway digital theater streaming is here to stay

4538769 - TodayHeadline

State pension: 700,000 people may be due back payments after DWP error | Personal Finance | Finance

PopularStories

Mother-of-two Sasha Walpole (pictured with her digger) claims Harry kissed her after asking her if she wanted to go outside for a cigarette during her 19th birthday party back in 2001
Politics news

‘I’m the older woman who took Harry’s virginity’: Digger driver Sasha Walpole, 40, comes forward

ad82ba607d0c13d65db96f2dce77d5b2 - TodayHeadline
breaking news today

Foreign Office accused of resisting proscribing Iran’s Revolutionary Guard

riverside1316r - TodayHeadline
Technology News

Why Broadway digital theater streaming is here to stay

4538769 - TodayHeadline
Finance News

State pension: 700,000 people may be due back payments after DWP error | Personal Finance | Finance

About Us

Todayheadline the independent news and topics discovery
A home-grown and independent news and topic aggregation . displays breaking news linking to news websites all around the world.

Follow Us

Latest News

Mother-of-two Sasha Walpole (pictured with her digger) claims Harry kissed her after asking her if she wanted to go outside for a cigarette during her 19th birthday party back in 2001

‘I’m the older woman who took Harry’s virginity’: Digger driver Sasha Walpole, 40, comes forward

ad82ba607d0c13d65db96f2dce77d5b2 - TodayHeadline

Foreign Office accused of resisting proscribing Iran’s Revolutionary Guard

riverside1316r - TodayHeadline

Why Broadway digital theater streaming is here to stay

Mother-of-two Sasha Walpole (pictured with her digger) claims Harry kissed her after asking her if she wanted to go outside for a cigarette during her 19th birthday party back in 2001

‘I’m the older woman who took Harry’s virginity’: Digger driver Sasha Walpole, 40, comes forward

ad82ba607d0c13d65db96f2dce77d5b2 - TodayHeadline

Foreign Office accused of resisting proscribing Iran’s Revolutionary Guard

riverside1316r - TodayHeadline

Why Broadway digital theater streaming is here to stay

  • Real Estate
  • Parenting
  • Cooking
  • NFL Games On TV Today
  • Travel and Tourism
  • Home & Garden
  • Pets
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • About

© 2023 All rights are reserved Today headline

No Result
View All Result
  • Real Estate
  • Parenting
  • Cooking
  • NFL Games On TV Today
  • Travel and Tourism
  • Home & Garden
  • Pets
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • About

© 2023 All rights are reserved Today headline

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.