Senior Doctor Advice Over Coping With Drs. Strike
MEDIA STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE,
MONDAY 21 AUGUST
2000
“SENIOR DOCTOR ADVICE OVER COPING WITH JUNIOR DOCTOR STRIKES"
"Senior doctors in public hospitals need to
disabuse hospital managers of any suggestion that they can
fill the gaps left by striking junior (resident) doctors,”
said Mr Ian Powell, Executive Director of the Association of
Salaried Medical Specialists, today. Mr Powell was
commenting on a letter sent to senior doctors by National
President Dr Peter Roberts last week.
“Other key elements
of this advice include:
Senior doctors should
make it absolutely clear to management the range and level
of services that can be safely provided and equally so what
must be cancelled.
The more services senior
doctors struggle to provide, the longer the strike might
continue and the greater the risk to patient
safety.
The key moral duty for senior doctors is
to maintain emergency cover during the strike.”
“Senior
doctors are the meat in the sandwich of an industrial
dispute that they are not party to. In the interests of
patient safety and fairness the sooner the recruitment and
retention issues responsible for this dispute are sorted out
the better,” concluded Mr Powell.
Ian
Powell
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
For further information
please contact:
04 499.1271 work 021 445.521 cellphone
Attached... Letter...
17 August 2000 6/5
Dear Colleague
RMO’s Industrial Action
The Resident Doctors
Association (RDA) is currently involved in difficult
contract negotiations on behalf of their members with
Hospital and Health Services (HHS) throughout the country.
There are two sets of negotiations, one with the three
Auckland HHS and the other with all other HHS employers.
Strike notices have already been issued to at least five
employers and others are expected any day.
The RDA has
advised us that they expect their members in other centres
to vote for strike action over the course of the next few
weeks. Dr Deborah Sidebotham, General Secretary of the RDA
has also advised us to expect a series of weeklong strikes
throughout the country until a settlement is reached. It is
likely that the strikes will coincide with one another and
the country may well be faced with a total national strike
of RMOs.
The negotiations are aggravated by a serious RMO
shortage. The reasons behind the shortage are numerous but
have been aggravated by the high level of student debt and
the superior conditions of employment overseas, particularly
in Australia. Australia has aggressively reduced RMO
working hours, thereby producing their own shortages. The
Australian RMO shortage, coupled with better hours and
substantially higher remuneration, is an irresistible lure
for RMOs facing years of student debt repayment.
If these
strikes go ahead our hospitals will not be able to cope. My
purpose in writing to you is to offer the Association’s
support and advice as you struggle to provide what care you
can for the sickest patients who may need urgent hospital
treatment during the strikes.
Perhaps the most important
advice we can offer is that you and your colleagues should
immediately disabuse management of any notion that senior
doctors and nurses can fill the gaps left by striking RMOs.
That is simply impossible. Normal services cannot be
provided and should not be attempted. In many specialties
senior medical staff function has already been compromised
by RMO and consultant shortages.
Our next advice is that
you and your colleagues, department by department and
through your senior medical staff group, should prepare and
submit to the chief executive a clear statement of the range
and level of services you can safely provide. This
statement should be unequivocal as to what services will be
cancelled and what limited services will be maintained.
However you should be aware that the more RMO gaps you and
your colleagues try to fill and the more services you
struggle to provide, the longer the strike will continue.
Attempts to cover for striking RMOs in the interests of
patient safety may create more risks for the patients you
seek to help, by prolonging the strike and delaying a return
to “normal” services. We have no legal or moral
responsibility to try to maintain services as if there were
no RMO strike; our duty is simply limited to maintaining
emergency cover until the strike is over.
In the absence
of RMOs, work should be undertaken only if it is both safe
and necessary to perform without RMOs. We must not
compromise patient safety by using less well trained staff
or by attempting to do the work ourselves. In a legal
sense, an RMO strike is not an unavoidable emergency that
might excuse a lower standard of care. These strikes were
foreseeable, have been well heralded and are even now
avoidable.
It is right that any additional work performed
under strike conditions should attract additional payment.
I urge you to contact the national office for further advice
in this regard. If you have concerns of a medico-legal
nature you should seek the advice of the Medical Protection
Society.
We must all hope that this crisis will soon pass
without harm to our patients, our colleagues, our own health
or our profession. Good luck, we will all need it.
Yours sincerely
Peter Roberts
NATIONAL PRESIDENT
PS
In 1995 the ASMS National Conference adopted guidelines:
Advice to Members when other Health Employees are on Strike
or take other forms of Industrial Action.
They are
available in our member’s blue ASMS Handbook: Including
Rules and are also available on our website at
www.asms.org.nz/contract/guideline.
I encourage all
members to read these guidelines and use them when
formulating a response to these RMO
strikes.