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Senior doctors to strike Tuesday after union rejects offer

Author
Megan Wilson,
Publish Date
Mon, 4 Sep 2023, 2:10pm
 Photo / Mead Norton
Photo / Mead Norton

Senior doctors to strike Tuesday after union rejects offer

Author
Megan Wilson,
Publish Date
Mon, 4 Sep 2023, 2:10pm

A senior doctors strike will go ahead tomorrow after the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists (ASMS) union rejected the latest offer from Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand.

The union is asking for an 鈥渋nflation-adjusted鈥 pay increase for its members and has disputed Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 comment that its 鈥渧ery fair and improved offer鈥 in mediation on Friday had 鈥渆ssentially鈥 met the union鈥檚 claim.

It comes after striking Tauranga Hospital cardiologist聽described the working conditions for specialists as 鈥渋ntolerable鈥, saying he would probably move into the private sector fulltime - or to Australia - if the 鈥渁busive鈥 public health system did not change. He said the strike was more about working conditions than pay.

The first strike will take place tomorrow from 12pm to 2pm at public hospitals and other health facilities where senior medical officers work. A second strike would follow on September 13 from 10am to 12pm and the union has signalled a four-hour strike would follow.

The union had 207 members in Tauranga and 47 in Whakat膩ne employed by Te Whatu Ora participating in the strike.聽聽senior doctors and dentists were expected to strike nationwide.

Te Whatu Ora said in a media release on Sunday about 250 planned care procedures nationally will be deferred because of the strike. Outpatient appointments will also be impacted. Doctors would still attend to life or limb-threatening emergencies if required during the strikes.

Tauranga Hospital cardiologist Dr Dean Boddington will take part in the strike. Photo / Alex Cairns

Tauranga Hospital cardiologist Dr Dean Boddington will take part in the strike. Photo / Alex Cairns

In a Te Whatu Ora media release on Sunday, chief people officer Andrew Slater said in the release it was 鈥渇rustrated and extremely disappointed鈥 that the ASMS was 鈥渞efusing鈥 to take its latest settlement offer to members for consideration..

鈥淓ach time Te Whatu Ora has revised its offer to reach a settlement, including a very fair and improved offer made on [September 1], which essentially meets the union鈥檚 claim,鈥 Slater said.

This included earlier pay increases than previously offered, which would cost an extra $16 million, he said.

The offer would give senior doctors and dentists salary increases over the next year of between 7 per cent and 12.9 per cent, amounting to between $15,000 and $26,000, he said.

Slater said growing the medical workforce would 鈥渢ake time鈥 and was not a 鈥渜uick fix鈥.

鈥淲e have put all that we can on the table. To invest more would involve having to make funding reprioritisations elsewhere.鈥

Slater said it had made a 鈥渟ignificant commitment鈥 to review terms and conditions across the senior medical workforce and to start removing remuneration inconsistencies hanging over from the former district health board system.

He said Te Whatu Ora was committed to working with senior doctors and dentists to address the pressures they faced.

Slater said a 鈥減rotracted dispute鈥 would distract from finding solutions to 鈥渨orkforce challenges鈥.

鈥淒espite this, the union has rejected the improved offer and our already-stretched workforce is now faced with contingency planning for strikes, which will disrupt the delivery of planned surgical care.

鈥淥ur door remains open to discuss how to reach a settlement.鈥

ASMS chief executive Sarah Dalton told the聽Bay of Plenty Times聽the union was 鈥渟till talking鈥 with Te Whatu Ora.

She said Te Whatu Ora had not yet met its claim for an 鈥渋nflation-adjusted increase when you look at it annualised鈥.

鈥淲hat they are claiming is across the whole term - we asked for a 12-month term. They鈥檙e offering a 17-month term. The percentages they are claiming don鈥檛 stack up.

鈥淚f they had offered our members a 12 per cent increase, we would鈥檝e taken it.鈥

Dalton said the union questioned the figure provided by Te Whatu Ora of the average salary package of $318,000.

鈥淢any of our members have contacted us and said, 鈥榃ow, I鈥檇 love to be earning that much money鈥.鈥

Dalton said it appreciated some doctors were 鈥渜uite well paid鈥, but the union鈥檚 salary scale went from $170,000 to $250,000 for a specialist.

鈥淚t takes 15 years practising as a specialist to reach the top of that scale. And there are states in Australia where a year-one specialist can be earning more than the top of our scale.鈥

The health system relied 鈥渉eavily鈥 on overseas-trained specialists, who made up nearly half of the senior medical and dental workforce.

鈥淰acancies are now sitting for very long periods of time unfilled because nobody is applying for those jobs anymore,鈥 Dalton said.

鈥淚f the most important thing is to have enough staff in our hospitals, and we think it is, then we need to make sure basic terms and conditions will keep people here and will attract people here.鈥

Strike information for patients

  • Patients who have an outpatient appointment or surgery booked on the day of the strikes should attend as planned unless they have been contacted to reschedule.
  • Emergency departments will remain open, and plans are in place to ensure safe care in hospitals.
  • People should continue to call 111 or come to an emergency department if they are experiencing a medical emergency.
  • Te Whatu Ora has an agreement with the union for senior doctors to attend any life or limb-threatening emergencies during the strike period if required.

Megan Wilson is a health and general news reporter for the聽Bay of Plenty Times听补苍诲听Rotorua Daily Post. She has been a journalist since 2021.

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