Urgent talks set to resume to head off junior doctors' strikes Two-thirds of maternity doctors would emigrate or quit if government’s contract is implemented, report warns
Government officials and the British Medical Association are due to resume urgent talks to avert a series of strikes by junior doctors starting on Tuesday, as a report warned that many maternity doctors were expected to quit or work abroad if a new government contract at the heart of the dispute comes into force.
Behind-the-scenes discussions were held on Sunday between the parties and an official from the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service. Continue reading... The Guardian
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Government officials and the British Medical Association are due to resume urgent talks to avert a series of strikes by junior doctors starting on Tuesday, as a report warned that many maternity doctors were expected to quit or work abroad if a new government contract at the heart of the dispute comes into force.
Behind-the-scenes discussions were held on Sunday between the parties and an official from the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service. Continue reading... The Guardian
See also:
- Doctors must talk (editorial) The Daily Telegraph
- As leaders of the future NHS, junior doctors must come back from the brink The Daily Telegraph
- Junior doctors’ leader Johann Malawana on NHS strikes: ‘No doctor wants to do what we are being pushed into’ The Guardian
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