The 72-hour walkout by medics who can have up to eight years of experience as a hospital doctor or three years in general practice, ran until 7 a.m. (0600 GMT) on Saturday and is expected to lead to thousands of National Health Service appointments and operations being cancelled.
This latest development follows a warning by NHS chiefs that the number of people seeking emergency help would rise as the hot weather continued across the UK.
NHS leaders have said that urgent and emergency care would remain the priority.
The strike is the third this year by junior doctors and is expected to cause mass disruption.
There have also been concerns about staffing, with some consultants saying they would not provide strike cover unless their employers agreed to a higher overtime rate.
The British Medical Association is calling for “full restoration” of pay, which it says has seen a 26 per cent cut.
The Government has offered five per cent to end the dispute.
Dr Vivek Trivedi and Dr Robert Laurenson, co-chairmen of the BMA junior doctors committee, said in a statement that “Junior doctors are in despair at this government’s refusal to listen.
“It should never have taken two whole rounds of strike action to even put a number on the table.
“And for that number to be a 5 per cent pay offer in a year of double-digit
inflation, itself another pay cut beggars belief.
“We have made it clear that junior doctors are looking for the full restoration of our pay, which has seen a 26 per cent cut,’’ it noted.
The junior doctors in England had seen their pay cut in real terms by more than a quarter over the last 15 years.
The statement added, “Today, they are demonstrating what that means to the survival of the NHS.”
A BMA poll of 1,935 junior doctors in England, published on Wednesday, disclosed that 53 per cent are making plans to leave the NHS.
The poll also stated that the doctors are thinking of leaving as a result of the Government’s response to industrial action.
Some 67 per cent do not think the NHS, in its current form, would exist in 10 years and 88 per cent expect the NHS to get worse over the next 18 months.
Meanwhile, BMA chairman of council, Prof. Philip Banfield has written to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, urging him to intervene in resolving the dispute.
Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said it was “extremely disappointing” that the BMA was going ahead with further strike action.
He said: “this 72-hour walkout will put patient safety and our efforts to cut waiting lists at risk.
“During recent meetings with representatives of the BMA junior doctors committee, we made a fair and reasonable opening offer and were discussing both pay and non-pay issues until they chose to end the talks by announcing new strike dates.
“If the BMA cancels these damaging and disruptive strikes and shows willingness to move significantly from their positions, we can resume confidential talks and find a way forward, as we have done with other unions.”
Doctors would join picket lines outside their hospitals on Wednesday, and the BMA would also hold rallies throughout the rest of the week.
This would include Oxford, Birmingham, London, and Manchester in the rallies.
Rory Deighton, director of the acute network at the NHS Confederation, said he is concerned about the impact of the strike.
According to him, “The NHS has become used to managing the disruption caused by industrial action so patients should feel assured their local services are doing everything they can to prioritise “those with the greatest clinical need and provide safe services for patients.”
However, each wave of strikes chips away at the NHS’s resilience, impacting on staff, internal relationships, and their ability to deliver on government pledges to reduce the elective backlog.
“A particular challenge this time will be securing the level of consultant cover for absent junior doctors due to ongoing local negotiations on the overtime payments,” Deighton insisted.
He continued, “In reality, this means that it is still uncertain exactly how many planned procedures and appointments will need to be scaled back and rescheduled.
“The national advice remains that patients should assume their care will continue unaffected unless told otherwise.
“With the BMA having announced its intention to re-ballot its members for a mandate for a further six months of strikes, and with industrial action from consultants, radiographers and nurses possibility, the short-term outlook feels gloomy.
“A resolution is desperately needed, and we urge the government to search for a resolution to this dispute.”
Earlier this week, Prof. Sir Stephen Powis, NHS England’s national medical director, said almost all routine or pre-planned care could be impacted in some way by the latest strike.
A similar walkout by junior doctors in April saw 196,000 hospital appointments and pre-planned operations rescheduled.
Speaking on Wednesday, he said , “The NHS is facing significant disruption this week with a three-day strike that is set to be exacerbated by the ongoing hot weather.”
The numbers of people seeking emergency care are on the increase as temperatures rise.
“While thousands of appointments are likely to be rescheduled due to strike action, the NHS will continue to prioritise urgent and emergency care,” Powis alerted further.
But with the country in the midst of a heatwave, the public can play their part by being sensible in the warm weather.
He maintained, “For the vulnerable and elderly, this includes drinking plenty of water, using sunscreen and avoiding prolonged periods in the sun or swimming in unsafe water.
“Please do also consider checking in on any vulnerable friends, family members, or neighbours who may struggle with the heat and humidity.
“People with conditions such as asthma should continue to use their inhalers,” Powis concluded.
(dpa/NAN)