- 18 December 2019
- 5 min read
Thousands of Northern Ireland nurses stage 12-hour strike over pay
SubscribeNI nurses are paid less than their counterparts in England and Wales, and half are considering leaving the profession because of staffing pressures.

9000 nurses strike over pay
Picket lines have been set up across Northern Ireland as thousands of nurses strike over pay.
The unprecedented action saw around 9,000 members of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) walk out for the next 12 hours, supported by thousands of other healthcare workers.
Routine medical appointments were cancelled, minor injury units closed and there will be delays to some ambulance responses. Social services workers also took industrial action.
Understaffing and pay means 50% of nurses considering leaving
Nurses in Northern Ireland are paid less than their counterparts in England and Wales.
Around half are considering leaving the profession because of pressure caused by under-staffing, with one in every eight posts vacant, a union said.
Dame Donna Kinnair, chief executive and general secretary of the RCN, said: “This is a moment that every nurse wishes had never come, but, faced with an abject failure to tackle unsafe staffing levels and severe pay inequality with colleagues from across the UK, our members in Northern Ireland are saying enough is enough.
“Nurses are taking a stand for their patients, and also for their colleagues, and it is about time that the powers that be finally sat up and took notice because the crisis in the HSC (Health and Social Care) cannot be allowed to continue.
“To every one of our members in Northern Ireland taking this stand, I want you to know that the RCN, and its entire membership, are right behind you.”
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