will risk patient safety. it s three and a half hours since the action began. let s go around the country and join our reporters on the picket lines. first, to our correspondent sanchia berg, who s outside the university college london hospital. we hospital. can see those pictures behind you, we can see those pictures behind you, junior doctors on the picket line, tell us what they are saying to you. line, tell us what they are saying to ou. ~ . , ., line, tell us what they are saying to ou. . , , to you. what they are saying is they are resolute- to you. what they are saying is they are resolute. they to you. what they are saying is they are resolute. they want to you. what they are saying is they are resolute. they want the - are resolute. they want the government to come, sit down and negotiate with them. they are saying they are prepared to strike, to continue to strike and saying they want a restitution of what effectively they say a pay cut over the last ten years
other countries, like spain or france, the pay of doctors there is either slightly below that you would expect in the united kingdom or ruffling on that level. it does depend which country you pick if you re at comparisons. fix, depend which country you pick if you re at comparisons. a, lot depend which country you pick if you re at comparisons. you re at comparisons. a lot of eole you re at comparisons. a lot of peeple might you re at comparisons. a lot of people might have you re at comparisons. a lot of people might have sympathy l you re at comparisons. a lot of. people might have sympathy with you re at comparisons. a lot of- people might have sympathy with the government position that 35%, even if it is going back in time and trying to bring them back to the level they should be out, it is not affordable in a cost of living crisis and they can submit to these demands because if they do then we have wage inflation as well. the government make the argument that the
An emergency consultant who declined to attend University Hospital Limerick (UHL), despite a request from a nurse manager concerned about a spiralling overcrowding crisis, told the inquest into the death of Clare teen Aoife Johnston (16) that overcrowding had left the emergency department resembling "a death trap" that weekend.
The older sister of Clare teen Aoife Johnston (16) wept this afternoon as she spoke of her devastation at not being able to say a final goodbye to her baby sister.
An inquest into the death of Clare teen Aoife Johnston (16) was told a nurse manager was informed that an Emergency Consultant declined to attend the University Hospital Limerick (UHL) emergency department amid serious overcrowding concerns, warning that he would attend in the event of a major emergency but not due to patient volume concerns.