Steve Barclay said the government wanted to work "constructively" with unions and was "keen" to get evidence to the independent pay review body "which reflects the pressure the NHS is under and wider context of inflation".
Planned industrial action has suspended in Scotland and Wales following new pay offers, while some nurses and ambulance staff were on strike on Monday. BBC News
See also:
- NHS strike: Re-open pay talks, hospital bosses plead BBC News
- Nurses offer to call off strikes in England if Sunak makes fresh pay offer BBC News
- Why are NHS staff striking and what should patients do? BBC News
- NHS chief: Strikes making hospital bosses restless BBC News
- Steve Barclay warns never-ending NHS strikes are having a terrible impact on patients The Daily Mail
- NHS under fire for hiring branding agency to improve its image amid strikes and waiting list crisis The Daily Mail
- NHS salary: Are UK nurses paid more than those in Europe? The Daily Mail
- How NHS doctor's £110,000 salary is dwarfed by European counterparts The Daily Mail
- Deadlock over NHS pay putting patients in danger, chief nurses warn The Guardian
- Ministers accused of being ‘on strike’ as action by nurses in England continues The Guardian
- Union leader calls Rishi Sunak deluded as NHS pay row escalates The Guardian
- NHS faces worst day of disruption as nurses and ambulance staff in England strike The Guardian
- Ministers ‘punishing’ nurses in England, says union as NHS hit by biggest strike The Guardian
- NHS strikes: Patient safety fears could stop nurses joining further coordinated walkouts The Independent
No comments:
Post a Comment