NHS consultants have accepted government pay offer, says BMA

NHS consultants have accepted a pay offer, ending a year-long dispute with the government, the British Medical Association has announced.

The BMA said its members in England voted in favour by 83%, describing the offer as an improvement on one rejected earlier this year. It includes changes to the review body on doctors’ and dentists’ remuneration (DDRB).

Consultants have taken strike action over the past year, adding to the NHS waiting list, which has also been affected by the junior doctors’ dispute, which remains unresolved.

The BMA said the offer included important changes to the DDRB, which represented “significant progress” in returning the pay review body to its “original purpose and independence”, and a 2.85% increase for those who had been consultants for four to seven years.

It said that from next year there would be changes to the way the review body appointed members, and the government would no longer be able to constrain its remit with reference to inflation targets and economic evidence.

The BMA added: “These changes mean that the DDRB can no longer ignore the historical losses that doctors have suffered or the fact that countries abroad are competing for UK doctors with the offer of significantly higher salaries. The offer also improves on the previous proposal to reform the consultant pay scale.”

The 2.85% pay increase for those who have been consultants for between four and seven years – who the BMA said received no additional pay under the original offer – is in addition to the 6% awarded during the DDRB process last summer.

Dr Vishal Sharma, who chairs the BMA consultants committee, said: “The last year has seen consultants take unprecedented strike action in our fight to address our concerns about pay and how the supposedly independent pay review process was operating.

“After years of repeated real-terms pay cuts, caused by government interference and a failure of the pay review process, consultants have spoken and now clearly feel that this offer is enough of a first step to address our concerns to end the current dispute. However, it’s now imperative that the DDRB utilises its independence to restore doctors’ pay and prevent any further disputes from arising.

“We’ve reached this point not just through our tough negotiations with the government, but thanks to the resolve of consultants, who took the difficult decision to strike, and did so safely and effectively, on multiple occasions, sending a clear message that they would not back down.

“But the fight is not yet over. This is only the end of the beginning, and we have some way to go before the pay consultants have lost over the last 15 years has been restored. Therefore, all eyes will be on this year’s pay review round, recommendations from the DDRB and response from the government.”

More details soon …