As junior doctors staged a four-day strike this week, which ended on Saturday morning, Dr Arjan Singh, a representative of the British Medical Association, said "all options are on the table" regarding a possible joint strike with nurses.
Nonetheless, hospital bosses have told how even the vague possibility of a mass walkout involving nurses and doctors has left them full of anxiety over the risk to patients.
According to report, the leader of England's biggest nursing union has said there are no plans to coordinate strikes with junior doctors - a move that would put the NHS under an unprecedented level of strain.
However, Pat Cullen, the leader of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), refused to be drawn on whether both professions could be on the picket line on the same day several months down the line.
She said the longer the dispute with the government over pay, conditions and staffing levels continues, the more patients will feel the impact, warning that strikes could continue right up until Christmas.
It comes after the RCN voted this week to hold a 48-hour strike from 30 April after rejecting a pay offer from the government.
Sir Julian Hartley, chief executive
of NHS Providers, told Sky News on Saturday that coordinated strike action
would be "completely unprecedented" and a "deeply
concerning" scenario.
However, Cullen, the trade unionist behind the country's biggest wave of nursing walkouts, told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme: "We have no plans in place to co-ordinate strikes.
"But if the government continues to allow doctors and nurses to spend their time on picket lines and not in their places of work, in their hospitals and communities then of course the impact of those strikes whether co-ordinated or not will be felt by our patients."
When pressed by Kuenssberg if a joint strike could happen in the near future, Cullen said: "I can only speak for the Royal College of Nursing this morning, and what I'm saying is there are no plans in place to coordinate strikes."
Cullen said that the government not
doing enough to address inadequate staffing levels and burnt-out doctors and
nurses is what's putting patients in danger.
She said: “The risks are there, they're not just there on the day of strike action, the risks within the health service to our patients are growing every single day because we do not have the doctors and the nurses to look after our patients. Patients deserve better, the public of this country deserve better."
Cullen added that nurses are quitting their posts because "they can no longer take the risk and the pressures that this government expects them to operate under".
On Friday, nurses voted 54%-46% to
reject the latest 5% pay rise from the government, along with a one-off payment
worth between "£1,655 and £3,789".
Cullen said it would be the best offer that they'd be able to get from the government but said she will "absolutely support" her members who made it "loud and clear" that it is not fair or reasonable.
She said the one-off payment was
"probably a bribe in their eyes" and is not going to fix the
"long-term problems in the NHS", which has seen pay falling behind
inflation for over a decade.
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