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RMH doctors concerned over government EBA inaction

11 September 2008
 
Medical Staff at the Royal Melbourne Hospital expressed grave concern over the Victorian Government for its lack of progress in offering a new enterprise bargaining agreement for the state’s public hospital doctors at a meeting with AMA Victoria last week.
 
The public hospital doctors’ enterprise bargaining agreement expired on 30 June and a new agreement is yet to be reached.
 
“We’ve been without an EBA for nine weeks and our negotiations with the government are slow and inadequate,” AMA Victoria President Dr Doug Travis said. “The current government proposal does not offer pay parity with other states or address many of the major problems within our public hospital system.”
 
“Doctors don’t want the distraction of a long and drawn-out process; they want to concentrate on patient care. We have said all along that we are happy to reach a reasonable agreement early on and that offer remains open.”
 
AMA Victoria has been meeting hospital doctors across the state to seek feedback on the current proposal, hear concerns and discuss options for future action.
 
The Royal Melbourne Hospital’s senior medical staff passed a resolution condemning the government’s lack of meaningful progress and failure to make hospital improvements.
 
The Royal Melbourne doctors said the Health Minister had been sitting on a review of public hospital medical staff for the past nine months. The review notes that poor conditions and low morale in Victorian public hospitals are driving doctors away from the public sector
 
So far only seven of the 71 recommendations have been partially implemented and Royal Melbourne doctors said the lack of action is “adversely affecting patient safety, health care quality and recruitment and retention of doctors in Victoria”.
 
Dr Travis said without significant public hospital reform, Victoria risked losing the best and brightest doctors to the private sector for better conditions or interstate for more attractive salaries.
 
“We expect the government to get serious about a new EBA now so doctors can focus on patient care. While we wait on an offer, we want to see some of the problems in Victoria’s public hospitals addressed.”

 

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