Resident physicians in Queens, New York, could strike next week

Ella Castle

About 300 resident physicians at Jamaica Hospital and Flushing Hospital in Queens, New York, could wage a three-day strike next week if they fail to reach an agreement with MediSys Health Network, which owns the hospitals. The action would be the first strike of New York City physicians since 1990, […]

About 300 resident physicians at Jamaica Hospital and Flushing Hospital in Queens, New York, could wage a three-day strike next week if they fail to reach an agreement with MediSys Health Network, which owns the hospitals. The action would be the first strike of New York City physicians since 1990, when resident physicians at Bronx-Lebanon Hospital walked out for nine days.

The residents are demanding a living wage and better benefits. They also have made urgent proposals to improve patient care, including regulations to keep patients safe, adequate time for each patient and a cap on the number of patients per resident.

“It’s very expensive to live in New York City,” Dr. Uchenna Chinawke, a resident of internal medicine at Flushing Hospital, told the Queens Daily Eagle. “My wonderful colleagues do a lot of good work for the community catering to the health of our patients, not just from Queens, but frankly from all over the world. The last thing they need is to be concerned about or worried about how they’re going to take care of their families and put food on the table while they’re doing this.”

Nurses on strike outside Mount Sinai Hospital on January 10, 2023, in New York City. [AP Photo/Andres Kudacki]

Negotiations have dragged on since November 1, 2022. The Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR), the union to which the workers belong, says that management has resisted all their demands. The CIR also has filed seven unfair labor practices charges against MediSys. It alleges that management has refused to schedule bargaining sessions and canceled bargaining sessions at the last minute without notice.

In late April, the residents voted by approximately 93 percent to authorize a strike if no agreement is reached. This overwhelming authorization vote is a clear demonstration of workers’ anger at the conditions that they face, which are similar at hospitals around the world.

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