German physicians go on strike over pay, working conditions
An anaesthesiologist in protective gear ventilating a COVID-19 patient in an operating room in Ratzeburg, Germany, Aug. 13, 2020. (Shutterstock File Photo)


Physicians working at municipal hospitals across Germany walked out on Tuesday, demanding better pay and working conditions.

In Hamburg, around 2,000 doctors marched through the city center holding placards reading "Good work – good pay" and "Overworked – underpaid."

The strike targeted public hospitals in seven of Germany's 16 states and private hospitals as well in an eighth.

Emergency care was unaffected by the strike.

The Marburger Bund medical trade union is demanding compensation for inflation since the last pay rise in the autumn of 2021 plus a 2.5% pay increase for 55,000 hospital doctors.

It has called for further strikes in other states on March 30.

The VKA employers' association said the demands for inflation compensation and a pay increase were unreasonable.

"Taken together, they result in a demand of almost 12%, which is unaffordable for municipal hospitals," said VKA lead negotiator Wolfgang Heyl.