Resident doctors’ industrial action is taking place from Friday 14 November to Wednesday 19 November

The British Medical Association (BMA) has announced strike action by resident doctors from 7:00am on Friday 14 November until 7:00am on Wednesday 19 November.

Many resident doctors at Gateshead Health will be taking part, and we expect our services to be significantly affected during and immediately after the strike. Our priority during this time will be to keep patients safe by focusing on emergency and urgent care.

Please only attend our Accident and Emergency (A&E) department if you are seriously unwell or need emergency treatment.

Unfortunately, some routine appointments and procedures may need to be rescheduled. We will keep this to a minimum, but it may be necessary to ensure emergency care remains available. Any postponed appointments will be rearranged as soon as possible.

If your appointment is affected, we will contact you directly. If you have not heard from us, please attend as planned.

You can help by:

  • Supporting your loved ones to return home from hospital if they are well enough
  • Using NHS 111, your GP or a local pharmacy for non-urgent advice or treatment

If your condition is not urgent or life-threatening, you may be asked to use an alternative service or return on another day.

Thank you for your understanding and cooperation as we work to keep care available for those who need it most.

Resident doctors who are members of the BMA have voted to take strike action. We and other NHS employers have been formally notified of a period of strike action beginning at 7am on Friday 14 November until 7am on Wednesday 19 November.

The strikes announced cover resident doctors across the NHS. This means action will impact every hospital in England. We are working hard to minimise the impact this action has on patients, but this will inevitably cause disruption during the strike period, and is likely to have a longer term impact on our services due to the additional resources required to keep services going safely. Thanks to the actions of NHS staff during the period of industrial action in July 2025, and specifically the willingness of many colleagues – including many resident doctors – to work extra shifts, we were able to maintain more activity than during the last period of action in June 2024.

We all know that industrial action comes at a very real cost to patients and the rest of the workforce and this round of action comes as the NHS is managing the busy winter period.  During these strikes, all other NHS staff (including consultants, GPs and other specialist doctors) will still be working. The NHS is working hard to minimise the impact on patients and make sure there are safe levels of staffing in key services patients need. However, we know from previous strikes that there will be t disruption, and we will make sure patients and the local community know how this might affect them.

Anyone who needs urgent care should use NHS111 online or through the NHS App to be assessed and directed to the right care for them. If you do not have internet access, then the free, 24/7 111 phone line is also available.

When someone is seriously ill or injured and their life is at risk, you should seek emergency care in the normal way, by calling 999.

We are working hard to minimise the impact on planned care. Patients with appointments booked on strike days will be contacted if their appointment needs to be rescheduled due to industrial action. If they have not been contacted, they should attend their appointment as planned. 

The NHS is working hard to minimise the risk to patient safety and has in place a clinically led process and where any safety issues identified can be raised with the BMA quickly.  It’s important that patients do not put off seeking urgent care, or not attend planned appointments unless they have been told otherwise.

The NHS will contact you if your appointment needs to be rescheduled due to strike action. This is likely to be a text, phone call or a letter and you should be offered an alternative date for your appointment.

We will be doing everything possible to minimise the number of patients who have planned care disrupted, so it may be the case that you do not receive very much notice of a postponement. We apologise for this unavoidable inconvenience. If we have not contacted you, please attend your appointment as planned.

Any appointments that need to be rescheduled will be done so as a priority.

No, if we have not contacted you, please attend your appointment as planned.

Please order any prescriptions you might need in good time to avoid delays in getting your medicines or the risk of running out of medicines during strikes.

All hospital inpatients will be informed of how their care will be impacted on a ward-by-ward basis by the staff involved in delivering their care.

GP practices will continue to be open during the resident doctors strikes. Resident doctors who train in GP practices, known as GP registrars, may take strike action. While they are an important part of the practice team, the effective running of the practice is not dependent on them as they are considered supernumerary to the workforce of the practice. Please continue to attend your GP and dental appointments, unless you are contacted and told otherwise.

Please continue to attend any dental appointments unless you are contacted and told otherwise.

Patients should only call 999 if seriously ill or injured, and there is risk to life. Ambulances will be dispatched where clinically appropriate. For more information on when to call 999 and when to go to A&E, you can visit the NHS UK website.