Second nurses’ strike in a week forces hundreds of cancellations in Northern Ireland

Royal College of Nursing calling for pay rise of 5% above inflation but has indicated it would accept lower offer

Recovery nurse Anne Nesbitt on the picket line outside the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, as nurses in England, Wales and Northern Ireland take industrial action over pay. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA

Hundreds of appointments and services have been hit as nurses take to the picket lines across Northern Ireland for the second time in a week.

Health trusts across the region cancelled or postponed appointments and services on Tuesday due to the second planned 12-hour strike by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN).

It comes after a 12-hour strike last Thursday across Northern Ireland, England and Wales.

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Nurses are taking the action over pay and safe staffing levels. The RCN has been calling for a pay rise of 5 per cent above inflation, though it has indicated it would accept a lower offer.

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The British government has implemented the recommendations of the independent pay review body, which gave nurses an increase of about 4.75 per cent, with a guaranteed minimum of £1,400 (€1,600).

Health secretary Steve Barclay has declined to discuss pay when meeting union officials but said his door is open to discuss other areas of nursing.

Emergency departments are among the areas exempt from the industrial action. However, the walkouts have affected hundreds of patients across Northern Ireland.

In the Belfast Health Trust, some 175 new outpatient appointments, 289 outpatient reviews and 26 inpatient day cases were cancelled.

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The South Eastern Trust said 17 endoscopy investigations were postponed, 15 surgical procedures cancelled, 229 outpatient appointments cancelled, while the minor injuries unit at Ards Hospital will be closed on Tuesday.

The Southern Trust said 204 outpatients appoints were cancelled, 28 day cases and nine inpatient appointments were cancelled, while 448 appointments would not go ahead within the older people and primary care division, and the minor injuries service at South Tyrone Hospital is closed on Tuesday.

It said emergency departments at Craigavon Hospital and Daisy Hill in Newry would remain open, but were likely to be busy.

In the Western Trust some 515 outpatient appointments were postponed, and 37 planned inpatient and day case procedures were cancelled. In the Northern Trust, 154 outpatient appointments were affected.

Recovery nurse Anne Nesbitt was on the picket line at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast. She said: “I have had enough. The job has become harder and harder. It is tough. You are just facing crisis after crisis. You are going home at night completely stressed.

“You are questioning if you can make a difference because the situation is that there are too many off sick or they haven’t been replaced and everybody just wants you to do more and more and more.

“Also, the wages situation is pathetic. I can go and work in Tesco for maybe £3 less an hour than I’m getting here. I love my job. I’m in it to care for people and it really hurts to watch that I am not able to do the job that I trained for.” – PA