Costly BMA strike putting patients at risk, not NHS
22 July 2025
Daniel Elkeles responds to British Medical Association claims that NHS trusts are causing potential harm to patients by not having cancelled planned treatment already in anticipation of a strike.
The resident doctors’ trade union claims NHS trusts are causing potential harm to patients by not having cancelled planned treatment already in anticipation of a strike.
Daniel Elkeles, chief executive, NHS Providers, said:
"The NHS, not the BMA, is putting patient's interests first.
"Given that some patients will be caused undoubted harm if the short-notice strike goes ahead, NHS trusts are doing the responsible thing by not cancelling people’s care whilst talks to avert the strike are ongoing.
"Now is a time for cool heads in the BMA because it’s not too late to avoid a damaging, costly strike. NHS trust leaders hope for a breakthrough from talks between government and the union.
"If the strike goes ahead then NHS trusts will do everything they can to avoid any harm to patients and are planning for as many patients as possible to be cared for."
Related articles
TrainingThe role of the senior independent director
11 March 20279:30 - 13:00OnlineA practical half-day session for NHS senior independent directors and non-executives on how the role supports effective board governance in times of challenge.
Leadership
Governance
TrainingRisk for healthcare risk practitioners
14 January - 12 March 2027Starts at 9:30In-personJoin our nine module course for NHS and healthcare risk practitioners to support you to develop and embed a strong, strategic approach risk management in your organisation.
Leadership
Governance
TrainingEffective report writing
3 December 20269:30 - 16:00In-personStrengthen your report writing skills to deliver clear and impactful papers for NHS boards and committees.
Leadership
Governance
