It's largely reported (in the fascist sympathising press) as just being about money (no surprise there).
It's not.
We don't have enough doctors and nurses. We have 'sent them all back' in a lot of cases (many to a personal choice of "fuck this I'm outa here" - including 'our own' that we have trained. To australia and the like.). Yet there are doctors coming out of the academic proscess, unable to secure a training place in hospitals, because those training positions have been massively slashed.
If they do nothing, there wont be a functioning health service in not so long. If they wait until reform get in there definitely wont be a functioning health service much quicker.
It's important for key stakeholders in our essential services to draw attention to the erosion of capability and service. In order for it to be drawn attention to, it has to have a meaningful impact. Then people have to think, and make good decisions, rather than being told what to do by billionaires and russians.
I would choose to take it as a long overdue wake up call for society as a whole to have a more grown up discussion around where we want to be in terms of building or tearing down social capital, and how we structure things going forward to stop the roof leaking ever more. I would not consider it a suitable example of an opportunity to demonise doctors, who had a 22% pay pay rise, that was an effective 30-odd percent pay cut over ten years. A period in which their colleages were lost to a hostile environment, or on the frontline fighting covid - dying at a disproportionate rate to the rest of the country, or being hounded out and assaulted.
For me, we really need to step behind the headlines and actually make our contry something to be proud of again...rather than a petty little fascist state that knows the cost of everything and the value of nothing.
YMMV.