Commenting on the news today (Wednesday) that the government has
  begun the NHS pay review body process for
  2023-24, UNISON head of health Sara
  Gorton said:
  “Ministers should be concerned with putting NHS pay right now,
  not trying to distract unions with the long, drawn-out
  evidence-gathering process of the pay review body.
  “Staff are exiting in droves and without urgent movement on
  pay, many more will follow suit.
  “NHS services are in a dire state, with too few staff to deliver
  safe patient care. That’s why hundreds of thousands of NHS
  employees have either voted to strike over pay and staffing, or
  are currently doing so.
  “Rather than pretending the NHS isn’t on the verge of a damaging
  dispute, the government’s focus should be on how to keep
  experienced staff in their jobs. They can do this with a wage
  rise that better reflects the harsh economic reality for working
  people.”
  Notes to editors:
  – In July, the government in Westminster announced that most
  NHS staff on Agenda for Change contracts (NHS terms and
  conditions) in England would get a pay rise of £1,400, in line
  with the recommendation of the NHS pay review body. This amounted
  to a 4.75% increase to the NHS pay bill. Health workers had
  been due a wage rise on 1 April 2022. Health workers in Wales got
  the same award. The health minister in Northern Ireland said he
  wanted to implement the same award but couldn’t because of
  the political stalemate, so NHS workers there have had no pay
  rise at all. 
  –  UNISON’s ballot of health staff working for more
  than 250 NHS employers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland
  launched on 25 October. That vote closes in Northern Ireland
  on Friday (18 November), and next Friday (25 November) in England
  and Wales. UNISON members in Scotland have voted to
  reject the latest pay offer from the Scottish government.
  – UNISON and most other health unions had called for an
  above-inflation pay rise in their submission to the NHS pay
  review body. Other unions either with a live strike mandate or
  balloting or for industrial action in the NHS
  include the Royal College of Nursing, Royal College of
  Midwives, the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, GMB and Unite.
  – To achieve a legal strike ballot, UK law requires unions
  to jump a variety of hurdles. In addition to requiring 50% of the
  workers being balloted to participate in any vote, the law
  demands that in very important public services, like many parts
  of the NHS, 40% of those sent ballot papers must vote yes. Unions
  are also unable to conduct strike ballots electronically. All
  ballot papers must be sent out in the mail and returned by post.
  – UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million
  members providing public services in education, local government,
  the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the
  public, voluntary and private sectors.