Audio By Carbonatix
A meeting between Deputy Health Minister, Benjamin Kumbuor, and the leadership of the Ghana Medical Association which is expected to find an amicable solution to doctors' demands for higher salaries and improved working conditions is scheduled to come off today Friday, reports The Statesman.
The meeting between the government and doctors to continue with negotiations to end the five-day-old work-to-rule action by the GMA was re-scheduled after the Deputy Minister dribbled the doctors Thursday.
Deputy General Secretary of the GMA, Frank Serebour, confirmed the re-scheduling of the meeting to Friday saying they (Doctors) were keeping their fingers crossed to see what came out of Thursday's meeting but were informed of the re-scheduling to Friday.
Dr Serebour said the work-to-rule action now in its fifth day would continue and they would not relent in their action until their demands were met.
"It seems that government is not in a hurry to come to the negotiation table and we are also not in a hurry to go back to work," he said.
An earlier meeting with the deputy minister on Tuesday did not yield any concrete solution.
The GMA is demanding 50 per cent increase in salary while government is proposing six per cent.
The GMA over the weekend said the position of the National Executive Council affected all doctors nationwide and not just junior doctors, noting that "we fully support the adoption of measures to bring some closure to these thorny issues".
The statement noted that since 2006 salaries of doctors had not been reviewed despite several attempts to get these issues resolved.
The association said negotiations had stalled since the last meeting held on Tuesday, May 12, without any consensus on either the salary review or conditions of service.
The National Labour Commission has reminded the GMA that its action to "work-to-rule" amounted to a strike that has been embarked upon without recourse to the dispute resolution procedures provided for in the Labour Act.
It further reminded the GMA that its members provided health and hospital services which according to regulation 20(c) of Ll 1833 were essential services and were therefore prohibited from resorting to a strike as any such strike could result in loss of life and pose danger to public health and safety.
Source: The Statesman
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
NACOC launches investigation into 320kg meth seizure linked to Ghana
2 hours -
Saibari screamer seals Morocco victory against Scotland
2 hours -
Legislated nonplus in Ghana’s fines and penalty units framework under Acts 572 and 573
2 hours -
Ireland deports 42 South AfricansÂ
3 hours -
FoSCel founder calls for genotype awareness and stronger prevention at KNUST
3 hours -
Central Region paralysed by widespread floods; taxi swept away in Moree
3 hours -
Hundreds stranded as downpour triggers transport chaos on Madina-Adenta stretch
4 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Student safety and discipline, Ofori-Atta’s Green Card and big resignations
4 hours -
GES must stop the 19th century administrative process now and fully activate GESIMS
4 hours -
This Saturday on ‘Prime Insight’: Multiple resignations and Ofori-Atta saga to dominate discussions
4 hours -
A call to unite behind our party and our flagbearer
4 hours -
Beyond the shortcut: Is Ghana ready for the AI learning revolution?
5 hours -
From screens to strategy: Is Ghana finally ready to close the digital divide for every child?
5 hours -
Is loyalty a queue ?
5 hours -
England winger Saka unlikely to start against Ghana
5 hours