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New Zealand hospitals crippled as thousands of doctors strike

Nearly 80 percent of junior doctors across New Zealand walked off work at public hospitals today, after a breakdown in union talks with the government over working conditions and wages.

The strike spotlights the difficulties Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern's government faces in delivering on its promise to pour money into social services and rein in economic inequality when it took office in 2017.

The centre-left government's traditional union support base says sluggish wage growth and soaring living costs have left workers struggling, with schoolteachers, nurses and court officials taking action last year to demand pay hikes.

"They want to have control over when we work, how we work and where we work," said Dr Deborah Powell, the union's national secretary.

"We tried to resolve this without a strike but we were left with no choice."

More than 3,300 government-employed junior doctors, of a national tally of 3,700, are staying away from hospitals and clinics after the talks broke down last week.

Some junior doctors clustered at street corners holding placards calling for better working hours, but there were no major demonstrations.

Thousands of surgeries, non-essential appointments, and medical services have been cancelled, although emergency and life-preserving services will continue as senior doctors, who are not part of the strike, are asked to step in.

Government hospitals asked people to limit visits only to emergency situations.

Junior doctors, or resident medical officers (RMOs), want to stick with existing employment contracts, as they said new terms the government proposes would mean longer shifts and allow doctors to be moved to other hospitals without notice.

Their union, the New Zealand Resident Doctors' Association (NZRDA), said it had been in talks with the District Health Board (DHB) for more than a year on the new terms, in which payment for overtime, weekend and night shifts also figured.

Reuters could not immediately reach DHB to seek comment.

The union has already called for a second 48-hour strike for Jan 29 and 30, which is likely to step up pressure on the government.

It is also holding talks to avert another strike this year by tens of thousands of school teachers after they rejected a pay offer.

- Reuters 


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