Concerns raised over care of cancer patients during impending nurses' strikes

Nurses are due to strike in England, Wales and Northern Ireland on Thursday and Tuesday 20 December. The Royal College of Nursing union insists cancer patients will get emergency and clinically urgent surgery during the action.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay
Image: Health Secretary Steve Barclay
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Senior health leaders have raised concerns about the care of cancer patients during the impending nurses' strikes - including warnings that some chemotherapy appointments are being rescheduled.

In a letter seen by Paste BN political editor Beth Rigby, the head of cancer care for NHS England, Dame Cally Palmer, called on Royal College of Nursing (RCN) union boss Pat Cullen to protect "life-saving" and "urgent" cancer surgery from walkouts, which begin on Thursday.

In another letter obtained by the Times, chief nursing officer for England, Dame Ruth May, says chemotherapy appointments are being rescheduled, and asked for assurances about the care of dying patients during the strikes in England, Wales and Northern Ireland on 15 and 20 December.

Chief nursing officer for England, Dame Ruth May
Image: Chief nursing officer for England, Dame Ruth May

Dame Cally said she was "extremely concerned about the absence of national derogation for urgent cancer surgery".

A derogation is an exemption, either of an individual or a whole service, from taking part in strike action.

She went on: "I understand how enormously difficult these issues are for all concerned, but our common aim is to ensure we do not cause harm to people undergoing vital cancer treatment to achieve cure or extension of life.

"It's important there is a clear and consistent decision on urgent cancer in line with the national derogation for chemotherapy and critical care."

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The RCN insists there will be a derogation for emergency cancer services, as well as for mental health and learning disability and autism services, and said the public was behind its action.

"The public backs our campaign and knows that patients need a strong nursing workforce, but at the moment there are record losses jeopardising safe care," the union said.

Dame Cally said the strikes were likely to lead to cancelled operations for cancer patients in P1 and P2 categories.

In her letter, she explained P1 surgery "is life-saving, and time critical, and must be maintained", while P2 is "urgent cancer surgery which has an optimal time window".

She said rescheduling procedures "is likely to lead to delayed operations and poorer outcomes" and many of these patients will move into the P1 category, requiring life-saving procedures as a result of re-scheduling.

Read more:
Strikes every day before Christmas - which sectors are affected and why

The RCN, however, insisted cancer patients would get emergency and clinically urgent surgery, and in its response to the letter assured that was "not in doubt".

A spokesperson for the union added: "This is a politically-motivated smear from a government that is failing cancer patients."

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In their correspondence, the chief nursing officer for England, and her counterparts in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, wrote to Ms Cullen raising a series of concerns about patient safety.

"Many chief nurses/directors of nursing are, of course, RCN members themselves and some have expressed feelings of having been let down by the RCN," they wrote.

The chief nursing officers said chemotherapy is being rescheduled from the strike days at some hospitals despite the union agreeing it would be exempt nationally.

They wrote that "there are examples of some trusts being asked to submit derogation forms for chemotherapy