Primary Care tomorrow faces a day of strike due to the “serious problems” in Osakidetza

Primary Care tomorrow faces a day of strike due to the “serious problems” in Osakidetza

The unions denounce “the malaise and the weariness” of both the workforce and the citizenry. The Basque Government does not believe that it is time to carry out stoppages. The negotiations between the unions and the Department of Health are broken.

Osakidetza faces this Friday a day of strike in primary careorganized by the main unions to denounce the “serious problems” of public health, which affect both the workforce and users.

Satse, ELA, LAB, CCOO and UGT have come together to call strikes when the negotiations of the representatives of the workers and the Department of Health are practically brokenafter the centrals decided not to sit down at the Sectorial Table until the Basque Government initiates a real negotiation.

The unions have announced that they are not going to attend, considering that it is an act of “propaganda and blackmail” against the workforce, since Osakidetza wants to put on the table an extraordinary call for the professional career with a disbursement of 300 million euros, an issue that has already been agreed but has not been fulfilled.

Even the Euskadi Medical Union (SME), which is not participating in the strike, has decided not to appear at the Sectorial Table, assuring that Osakidetza’s willingness to negotiate is “null”.

The unions denounce “the malaise and the weariness” of both the workforce and the citizens themselves and criticize that the Department of Health has not taken “a single step” nor has it proposed “a single measure” to reverse the “dismantling and the precariousness” that “ravage” the public health system.

They reproach the “absolute lack of planning for the generational changeover of a workforce” and warn that the precariousness and workload are causing Osakidetza professionals in Primary Care to leave their positions towards specialized care, private health or abroad.

The plants calculate that an OPE with “5,000 new places, of which 1,000 should be for Primary Care“, in order to ensure that workloads are manageable, working conditions are decent and health care is of quality.

In the opinion of the unions, the pandemic “has become the perfect excuse to continue with its policies of cuts, dismantling, lack of investment and privatization.”

Both the Lehendakari, IƱigo Urkullu, and the Minister of Health, Gotzone Sagardui, have acknowledged that there are difficulties, but they assure that the public system has given a “high-level” response during the pandemic and that it is not the time for a strike.

The Basque Government insists that health spending is the highest of all the autonomous communitieswith 1,984 euros per person per year, ensures that two thirds of the budget is allocated to personnel and that the accounts have gone from 3,800 million euros in 2019 to 4,300 this year.

Both the strike in Primary Care and the general strike on Monday have been joined by EH Bildu and Elkarrekin Podemos-IU. On Saturday the unions will hold demonstrations in the three capitals of the CAV.

Minimum services of a Saturday

The strike will not affect screening, extractions and vaccination, where the Basque Government has set a minimum service of 100%, as well as in the Continuous Care Points (PAC) and in cleaning, while in health centers it must 50% of the staff who usually do so on a Saturday work and telephone service.


Source: Eitb

You may also like

Immediate Access Pro