Govt, doctors Resume Negotiations Today

Negotiations for conditions of service for public-sector doctors and other health professionals are expected to resume at the Ministry of Finance today.

Employment and Labour Relations Minister, Mr Haruna Iddrisu, and the President of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Dr Kwabena Opoku-Adusei, confirmed the resumption of negotiations in separate interviews with the Daily Graphic yesterday.


Both Mr Iddrisu and Dr Opoku-Adusei agreed that the negotiations should be conducted in good faith, without recourse to past weeks’ incidents during which acrimony and mistrust took centre stage in the negotiations.

Codified conditions of service
Mr Iddrisu said the government was committed to discussions that would result in the codification of conditions of service for public-sector doctors and all health professionals.

According to him, the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission (FWSC) had already invited all the stakeholders to ensure the resumption of negotiations.

He urged all the stakeholders, including the government team, to negotiate in good faith and ensure that they were moderate in their demands,considering the state of the economy.

Social dialogue
The minister stressed the need for the stakeholders to be mindful of the fact that they could not get everything they were asking for.

He said social dialogue was essential, since any industrial action was inimical to the health sector.

He revealed that four of the 12 chapters of the proposed conditions of service had already been negotiated and was hopeful that the remaining issues would be dealt with expeditiously.

Commendation
Mr Iddrisu expressed appreciation to the National Peace Council, the National House of Chiefs, the clergy, media and other stakeholders who worked behind the scenes to convince the doctors to return to work.

He indicated that the government would pay the doctors their August salaries, although it (government) had earlier threatened not to pay them.

GMA
Dr Opoku-Adusei said doctors were going back to the negotiating table in good faith and expressed the hope that the government team would do same.

That, he explained, meant that documents on the negotiations and discussions would not be made public.

According to him, negotiations had a give-and-take element and so the fact that the doctors made demands did not mean that everything should be provided.

Dr Opoku-Adusei was hopeful that the negotiations would be concluded early enough, so that any agreement reached could be factored into the 2016 budget.