Junior Doctors Contract To Be Imposed By Jeremy Hunt: Here's What NHS Staff Think

Here's What NHS Staff Think Of Jeremy Hunt Imposing A Junior Doctor Contract
Junior doctors and their supporters stage sit-down protest outside Downing Street, in Westminster, London, during a "masked march" protest over pay and conditions, the third time they have taken to the streets in protest at the Government's proposals, which it says aims to improve care over weekends.
Junior doctors and their supporters stage sit-down protest outside Downing Street, in Westminster, London, during a "masked march" protest over pay and conditions, the third time they have taken to the streets in protest at the Government's proposals, which it says aims to improve care over weekends.
Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

The Government has announced it will impose its new contract on junior doctors after talks failed to reach agreement.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the process had created "considerable dismay" among junior doctors but he felt that given time, the contract would be accepted as a good thing.

Initial responses from NHS staff would suggest otherwise.

In a statement to the Commons he said no health secretary could ignore the fact that standards in NHS hospitals are "too low" at weekends and more patients die than during the week.

It is unclear whether the British Medical Association (BMA) will now stage further strikes in protest at the new contract.

The Health Secretary had been warned he could face mass-resignations if a new contract was imposed.

An online poll by The Independent revealed that 922 out of 1,045 doctors were prepared to quit.

On Wednesday Hunt told the BBC doctors were being offered a "fair deal,"

"The job of health secretary is to do the right thing for patients and we have now had eight studies in the last five years that have shown that mortality rates at weekends are higher than they should be,” he said. “My job is to do something about that. I think it's a good deal, it's a fair deal.”

Decrying the industrial action as “very damaging,” the health secretary noted that 43 percent of junior doctors had ignored the strike.

Wales has no plans to impose a new contract and "any junior doctors from any part of the UK interested in working in Wales will find fair working conditions and a very warm welcome here", Welsh Health and Social Services Minister Mark Drakeford has said.

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