DOZENS of appointments were rescheduled at Wirral University Teaching Hospital as a result of the nurses' strike last week, new figures show.
NHS leaders warned strike action is making it “more difficult” for the health service to tackle the backlog of care as thousands of acute care appointments across the country were cancelled during the Royal College of Nursing's 28-hour strike.
How many appointments were rescheduled in Wirral?
NHS England figures shows 67 appointments in acute care were rescheduled on May 1 and 2 at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust because of the nurses' strikes.
Of them, four were inpatient appointments and 63 were outpatient.
Charlotte McArdle, NHS England’s deputy chief nurse, said despite extensive efforts to limit disruption, the recent industrial action had a very significant impact for patients and staff.
She said: "Across the NHS we have now seen more than half a million appointments and procedures rescheduled over the last six months as a result of strikes from staff in a range of NHS roles – and with each strike, it is becoming harder.
"Our staff are doing all they possibly can to manage the disruption and deliver rescheduled appointments as quickly as possible, but there’s no doubt that each round of industrial action makes it more difficult for the NHS to tackle the backlog."
Across England...
Across England, at least 7,600 appointments were cancelled and rescheduled in acute care as a result of the 28-hour strike.
Out of 136 NHS trusts, only 44 recorded appointments needing to be rescheduled.
The data also shows at least 5,000 staff joined picket lines on May 1, but many hospitals did not report workforce figures so the number is likely much higher.
At Wirral University Teaching Hospital, 32 staff members were recorded as absent on May 1 due to strike action.
Health Secretary Steve Barclay warned the RCN the deal which most unions accepted was the “final offer”. However, the union vowed to ballot members later this month and warned strikes could take place across all of NHS England between June and December.
The Government is currently offering a 5% pay rise plus a one-off sum of at least £1,655.
An RCN spokesperson said the impact on patients is the "hardest part" and added nursing staff are apologetic about the individual patients affected.
They said: "We are taking this action, however, because everyday nursing staff and patients are suffering as staff shortages affect patient safety.
"Patients and the public know that and their support is appreciated and not taken for granted."
They said the campaign has "always been about patients and a safe NHS".
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