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Resident doctors in England will stage a six-day strike from April 7 to April 13 after rejecting a government pay and jobs offer, the British Medical Association (BMA) said.
The action, the 15th since 2023 and, at six days, the joint-longest in the dispute, follows weeks of talks that collapsed over the governmentâs decision to phase pay-progression changes and some increases over three years rather than upfront.
The independent pay review body recommended a 3.5% uplift for 2026/27, which the government accepted and packaged with reimbursement of mandatory exam fees, between 4,000 and 4,500 additional specialty training posts over three years and phased pay-progression reforms.
The BMAâs resident doctors committee said the structure risks locking in further real-terms pay erosion and will not stop doctors leaving for better-paid roles abroad.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting urged the union to reconsider, saying the staged offer âdoesnât get betterâ and warning that economic pressures â including the potential impact of the Iran conflict â could limit future offers.
NHS leaders warned the strike could cost about ÂŁ300m and disrupt appointments, tests and planned operations.






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