NHS crisis deepens as Unite ballots 1,500 Merseyside workers for strike in early 2023
Over 1,500 more NHS workers across Merseyside have begun balloting for strike action, Unite, which represents some 100,000 NHS workers.
Unite said its healthcare members are warning the NHS is on ‘life support’ and that without serious investment to stem the recruitment and retention crisis and save failing services it may not survive.
The workers perform roles in nursing, healthcare, science, counselling, psychology, dentistry, pharmacology, audiology, optometry, administration, IT and building maintenance services.
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “Anyone who has had the misfortune to be taken to hospital in an ambulance or spent far too long waiting for treatment knows the NHS is in a fight for its life. Burnt out low paid staff, who have seen their wages attacked every year for more than a decade, are leaving in droves.
“The NHS is on life support and without proper pay and funding it may not survive. That’s why NHS workers are standing up: They know that decent pay is essential to the service’s future.”
The constant real terms pay cuts and the increasing pressure that workers are experiencing in the NHS are key factors in the growing vacancies for staff in the NHS. Nearly one in 10 posts – 132,000 positions – are now vacant and the figure is continuing to grow.
Unite members at NHS Blood and Transplant and the Mersey Care NHS Foundation, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation, Christie NHS Foundation and Wirral University Teaching Hospital Foundation are being balloted for strike action. The ballot results are expected in late December.
Unite has begun balloting nearly 10,000 health service workers across the country for strike action on top of thousands of other NHS workers who it has been balloting since October. Unite is also planning to ballot thousands more in the coming months.
ENDS