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       'Pretty dire' situation for patients as junior doctors strike over pay
       cuts
        
 (HTM) Source
        
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       A sign held by a protester at Christchurch Hospital.  Photo: RNZ /
       Nate McKinnon
        
       The disruption to patient care from a nationwide junior doctors strike
       is bordering on unsafe, one senior doctor claims.
        
       Resident medical officers - junior doctors - picketed outside
       hospitals in eight main centres on Tuesday morning in protest of a
       proposed pay cut for trainees in psychiatry, radiation oncology,
       pathology, public health and general practice.
        
       While most junior doctors had been offered a 20 percent pay rise by
       Health New Zealand / Te Whatu Ora, doctors in those specialities
       singled out would receive a 12 percent pay cut.
        
       Te Whatu Ora chief clinical officer Richard Sullivan said the
       country's emergency departments remained open and patient safety and
       welfare were the top priority during the 24-hour strike.
        
       However, a source inside Waikato Hospital told RNZ it was not business
       as usual and the strike had brought huge ramifications for patients.
        
       The senior doctor, who did not want to be named, said it was very
       distressing that officials appeared to be minimising the impact on
       patients by implying there was "no meaningful disruption to services
       and that almost everything is going ahead as normal".
        
       "Certainly in Waikato, there are plenty of elective services cancelled
       today - clinics, surgery, day stay procedures etc," they said.
        
       "And although I can only speak for my department, we are really tight
       for cover from SMO (senior medical officers) staff for acute services
       and pretty much all elective work has been cancelled.
        
       "So it's actually pretty dire, and if next week's planned strike goes
       ahead it's going to be worse. I'd go as far as to say that it's
       bordering on unsafe."
        
       Junior doctors picketing outside the Waikato Hospital campus on
       Tuesday morning.  Photo: RNZ / Natalie Akoorie
        
       Sullivan did not address the concerns at Waikato but said the impact
       of the strike on planned procedures varied by hospital, depending on
       the number of New Zealand Resident Doctors Association (NZRDA) members
       in each area.
        
       "In areas with a higher number of NZRDA members a small number of
       surgeries and procedures have gone ahead today for high-risk cases and
       non-deferrable and other scheduled cases have been postponed and will
       be rescheduled.
        
       "In other areas with lower NZRDA membership there has been less
       disruptions, and more procedures are able to proceed. However, this
       remains limited by the overall staff availability."
        
       He said junior doctors were a "vital and valued part of the health
       workforce, and we are proposing a very significant investment in
       settling the NZRDA collective agreement".
        
       The average pay rise proposed was 18 percent, he said.
        
       "We have guaranteed that no current RMO would receive a pay cut under
       this offer.
        
       "We are highly focused on settling this bargaining so we can avoid any
       further disruption to patients and the wider health system."
        
       Sullivan said Te Whatu Ora's application for facilitation had been
       granted by the Employment Relations Authority.
        
       "We encourage the union to accept the authority's recommendation that
       the union withdraws its current strike notices as an act of good faith
       due to the facilitation process."
        
       A junior doctor named Minesha, spoken to by RNZ on the picket line
       outside Waikato Hospital, said it was hard to strike knowing the
       impact on patients.
        
       "I'm starting as a paediatric surgery registrar, so next week on
       Thursday/Friday when we're striking again I would have just started a
       job and have to be here striking for two days.
        
       "It is hard to do that. It's distressing to have to leave when we know
       that there's so much going on and our patients really need us, but
       this is really important so that we have a future of doctors."
        
       Natalie, a Waikato Hospital medical registrar also picketing, said the
       whole service at the major tertiary hospital was forced to change for
       the day, with most of the hospital's 300-400 junior doctors on strike,
       because we are such an undervalued but integral part of the hospital".
        
       "We were just looking through the roster and there were no covers
       anywhere - there were not many [junior] doctors left in the hospital.
        
       "So lots of services did have to stop and I think, although that's
       terrible for a day, it just shows how important we are and how we need
       to be valued for what we do in the hospital."
        
       Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon
        
       Resident Doctors Association Waikato representative Dr Visharn
       Sathiyakumar said the targeted specialities already had workforce
       shortages, and he worried about access to treatment, particularly for
       cancer patients, if radiation oncology trainees left.
        
       "Cancer in New Zealand I know gets a lot of attention, but when it
       comes to specialist care it's always historically been not as
       supported... especially when it comes to doctor training pathways.
        
       "We have shortages currently in our department when it comes to
       specialists and across the country where wait times are getting
       longer, there's entire machines - we use radiotherapy machines to
       treat cancer which are these multimillion-dollar machines - that we
       cannot run because we don't have enough people to staff them.
        
       "And in this situation, offering a pay cut to these class of trainees
       I think it's going to worsen that inequity."
        
       He was concerned about the trickle-down effect of a pay cut on
       resident medical officers (RMOs) who were already burned out and
       considering leaving for Australia.
        
       Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon
        
       The same applied to general practice, where there was a dire
       nationwide shortage and weeks-long waits to see a GP.
        
       "It's the pay cut that's difficult to swallow, regardless of the fact
       that you're losing all these people, and you're telling us actually
       we're not valued."
        
       The roughly 2500 strikers made up about a half of the junior doctor
       workforce, who joined forces for the industrial action because about
       600 positions were in line for the pay cut.
        
       Psychiatry registrar Sarah Hanson was picketing with about 50 doctors
       outside Wellington Hospital. Her speciality was one where pay cuts
       were planned, which she said was very unfair given there was already a
       shortage.
        
       "I've got colleagues who aren't sure whether they can afford to
       continue on the training programme because they have families to look
       after, so it is a very real threat to our retention and recruitment of
       staff."
        
       Even though they were called junior doctors, some of those striking
       had more than 10 years' experience and would soon become specialists.
       Others were just out of medical school.
        
       Jamie Hogg worked in mental health, and said some GP trainees were
       also set to get a cut even though they were facing shortages too.
        
       "Do we want to be the training ground for Australia? No I don't think
       so, I think we want to keep New Zealand trainees in the country and
       value us."
        
       If the two sides could not reach agreement by next week, a second,
       two-day strike was planned from 16 May.
        
        
        
        
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