Northern Ireland Doctors Stage 24-Hour Strike Amid Pay Dispute, Health Services Disrupted

June 29, 2026
Northern Ireland Doctors Stage 24-Hour Strike Amid Pay Dispute, Health Services Disrupted
  • Northern Ireland resident doctors will stage a full 24-hour strike starting at 07:00 BST on Monday, following earlier strikes by consultants and specialist doctors as part of a broader dispute over pay restoration and contract terms.

  • This strike marks the first time consultants and specialist doctors in Northern Ireland have joined industrial action together, expanding the disruption across the health service.

  • The health minister reiterates commitment to pay uplifts of 26-27% for HSC staff as recommended, but says there is no scope for additional awards beyond the independent review body’s recommendations within the current draft budget.

  • The minister defends a 3.5% uplift, noting it aligns with the independent pay body’s guidance and warns that higher pay could have wider repercussions for other public sector workers without a new budget.

  • The Department of Health says most services will continue with 90% of operations proceeding and full emergency cover in place, though some routine and elective services will be cancelled.

  • Trusts report cancellations or rescheduling: numerous outpatient appointments, surgeries, and procedures are affected across Southern, Northern, Belfast, Western, and South Eastern trusts.

  • Medical leaders emphasize staffing shortages and warn that goodwill from frontline staff is not a reliable solution amid ongoing pay disputes.

  • The BMA’s resident doctors chair warns of a “perfect storm” from rising patient numbers and doctor shortages, urging urgent government engagement to avert further strikes.

  • More than half of penultimate and final-year medical students in Northern Ireland plan to leave or are undecided after foundation training, citing poor pay as a major factor.

  • BMA consultants and SAS committees highlight 18 years of pay erosion, recruitment and retention challenges, and burnout from staffing shortages.

  • Dr Farren anticipates cancellations and expresses concern about burnout and doctors relocating abroad, while stressing patient safety and prioritization of care.

  • The BMA will meet Stormont’s health committee to discuss the pay dispute, with SAS doctors also weighing in on industrial action.

Summary based on 3 sources


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