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All GPs to receive 4.5% pay rise across devolved nations

All GPs to receive 4.5% pay rise across devolved nations

All GPs, including partners, will receive a 4.5% pay rise across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, but GP leaders said it did not go far enough.

Across the devolved nations, the following groups of GPs will receive a 4.5% increase:

  • Independent contractor GPs;
  • Doctors in training;
  • Salaried GPs ;
  • GP trainers and GP appraisers;
  • GPs employed by Trusts and Health Boards on locally-determined contracts.

But while GPs in Northern Ireland are to get a 4.5% increase in pay, there is no timescale for receiving it.

Northern Ireland health minister Robin Swann said he accepted the recommendations made by the DDRB and it would be backdated to 1 April.

But he was unable to announce the immediate implementation of it because Northern Ireland still does not have an agreed Executive Budget for 2022/23.

A statement from BMA NI said the doctors’ body had written to the minister to request an urgent meeting to discuss the pay award.

BMA Scotland chair Dr Lewis Morrison said it was a ‘hugely disappointing award’ which did ‘nothing to undo years of real-term pay erosion for doctors’.

‘In the face of spiralling inflation this is still a large real-terms pay cut, which will be hugely damaging to the morale of an already exhausted and depleted workforce, after two and a half years leading our country’s response to the pandemic and the years of vacancies and escalating demand that preceded that,’ he said.

BMA Cymru Wales Council Chair, Dr David Bailey, also described the award as a pay cut and ‘a kick in the teeth for hard-working doctors in Wales’.

Dr Bailey, who is a GP from Gwent, said: ‘The timing of this pay cut could not be worse. Doctors have gone above and beyond throughout the Covid-19 pandemic to care for patients, putting themselves and their families’ lives at risk in the process.’

He added that high levels of exhaustion and burnout meant it was easy to see why doctors were leaving the NHS at an alarming rate.

In England, GP partners are on a five-year deal aimed at giving them a 2% year-on-year pay rise and the Government confirmed to Pulse that there will be no adjustment to enable practices to adhere to recommended pay increases for salaried GPs and staff.

The BMA England’s GP Committee, which has been given a mandate to explore industrial action in response to the pay announcement, has told Pulse that it remains in the early stages of preparations.


          

READERS' COMMENTS [5]

Please note, only GPs are permitted to add comments to articles

The Prime Minister 8 August, 2022 5:19 pm

GENERAL PRACTICE WILL COLLAPSE…..THE GOVERNMENT ARE HELL BENT ON DESTROYING GENERAL PRACTICE…..AND THE DAILY NUTTER IS THEIR ACCOMPLICE……

Patrufini Duffy 8 August, 2022 5:27 pm

Because you’re worth it.
Keep signing up.

Andrew F 9 August, 2022 12:57 pm

“The government confirmed that there will be no adjustment to enable practices to adhere to recommended pay increases for salaried GPs and staff” in England.

I can also confirm that there will be a commensurate cut in patient services in England in order to balance the books.

Malcolm Kendrick 10 August, 2022 9:51 am

GPs to receive 4.5% pay cut across devloved nations. There, sorted that headline for you.

Mark Cathcart 12 August, 2022 9:38 am

And in Northern Ireland the decline will intensify as our interim MoH cannot implement this pay rise due to stormont not sitting? Yet he can award private providers over 40 million pounds to “tackle” secondary care waiting lists? Strange! So doh can pay vast sums to private providers but can’t implement a nationally agreed pay award to loyal nhs workers? Something doesn’t seem quite right here