KAMPALA: Doctors under the Uganda Medical Association (UMA) and the medical interns under the Federation for Uganda Medical Interns (FUMI) have agreed to suspend their strike and return to work.
Dr. Samuel Oledo, the UMA President, told journalists on Wednesday, December 22, 2021, that the government has committed to handling their grievances that include low pay, understaffing, compensating families of those that died of COVID-19, and restocking of drugs and sundries.
“As doctors of Uganda, the head of clinical practice, on December 22, we unanimously agree as doctors to suspend the industrial action till May 1, 2022, as we engage the government to fulfill these (pending) issues in dialogue,” he said.
“In the same spirit, as head of the clinical discipline and head of patients care, we pass the communication to our dear nurses and medical lab, clinical Officers and radiologists, starting at midnight today, let all workers be back at their places of work to give patients a great service. Our Christmas shall be in the hospitals,” he emphasized.
He said doctors will receive their enhanced salary of Shs.5 million in July when the new financial year starts. He said the government has also committed to considering getting them duty-free vehicles and that it is now putting together with members of the task force to handle issues of compensation. The association has already submitted the names of seven members to sit on this committee. These will be representing and negotiating for families of the 85 health workers that died, of whom 35 were medical doctors.
The doctors went on strike 29 days ago with threats of not bending to any promises but actual actions from the government considering that the issue of salary enhancement had been pending since 2017, when while on strike, doctors were promised slow enhancement of salaries every financial year until they hit Shs5million for a junior doctor.
By the time they went on strike this time, their salaries had only been enhanced once to 3million Shillings. Oledo says if government repeats the same tricks this time, they will without notice go back to industrial action on May 1, 2022.
The Association’s Secretary-General Dr. Herbert Luswata, says their glimmer of hope and new decision arises from the fact that the recent 35billion Shillings supplementary budget is catering for medical interns’ salary of Shs2.5million and restocking of drugs.
He says since the law provides that interns earn half the pay of their senior colleagues, there’s no way the government will fail to implement it especially now that there’s a court decision where the Ministry of Health is committing to the pay.
According to the new deal, junior doctors will earn 5million Shillings, pharmacists will bag 4.8 million Shillings whereas a consultant will earn 17million Shillings. A senior consultant will earn 20million Shillings together with a perk of a chauffeur-driven car.
Doctors say their negotiations were crosscutting all through the medical fraternity as the changes will also be effected for graduate nurses and medical laboratory professionals who only announced their strike on Monday.
However, the medical laboratory professionals insist that their grievances haven’t been attended to and that they are having their day 2 of industrial action. Patrick Dennis Alibu, the Laboratory Association Secretary-General said they want the government to pay graduate lab professionals, the same pay of Shs5million as the medical doctors.
But Oledo says the absence of the lab technicians will not stop them from attending to patients and that they are better off calling off the latest strike.