Patients face longer waits unless strikes end, NHS leaders warn
Health leaders have warned that the NHS will struggle to clear treatment backlogs and improve emergency care unless strikes by thousands of staff are brought to an end.
The NHS Confederation, which represents NHS organisations, said the government must "show initiative" to end the dispute or risk patients suffering even longer waiting times than at present.
Thousands of nurses and ambulance workers are due to strike on Monday in what many predict will be the biggest strike day the NHS has ever seen.
Nurses from the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) will walk out alongside GMB and Unite paramedics, call handlers and other staff at ambulance trusts.
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Nurses will strike again on Tuesday, ambulance workers again on Friday and physiotherapists on Thursday.
In a warning to the government, the NHS Confederation said "the intensifying waves of industrial action", which are leading to tens of thousands of appointments needing to be postponed, must be brought to an end.
It said there was a "growing fatigue" among NHS leaders given the cumulative impact of the strikes, adding it was becoming harder to deal with the constant disruption.
Figures suggest the number of NHS cancellations of operations and appointments has increased to more than 88,000.
The NHS Confederation warned that as well as the threat to tackling waiting lists, patients may be put off accessing healthcare due to strikes, which only stores up problems for the future.
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Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said: "NHS leaders have managed the impact of the individual strike days very well up until now, but they are growing increasingly restless about the impact this dispute is having on patient care at a time when they have made solid progress to recover services after the pandemic.
"We face a hugely disruptive week for patients, with five consecutive days of walkouts planned, and the government cannot afford to let this escalate any further.
"We urge ministers to take the first step and find a resolution to this deadlock with the unions.
"It is not only the disruption on the day that is a cause of worry but the longer-term damage on service delivery, staff morale, reform, and how the public engages with the NHS too."
It comes as NHS England told patients to seek urgent care if they need it during strikes and to continue to attend appointments as planned unless told otherwise.
On Friday, the GMB, RCN and Unison announced they were suspending strikes scheduled for members in Wales after a new offer aimed at resolving a pay dispute.
They said this would allow further negotiations with the Welsh government.
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said: "Our sympathies are with anyone whose care has been affected as a result of strike action, and we urge unions to carefully consider the impact on patients.
"The Health and Social Care Secretary has been having constructive discussions with unions about the 2023/24 pay process, and wants to continue talking about what is affordable."
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