Karan Kapoor is the latest medic to hit out at Jeremy Hunt with a dramatic statement against his 7-day NHS plans.
The ear, nose and throat consultant earns £313.54 extra for being available for 120 hours - just £2.61 an hour.
He's blasted the payment, for which he must be near his hospital and refrain from drinking, as 'significantly less than the minimum wage let alone the living wage'.
And he's written an open letter telling the health secretary to apologise and 'engage in a conversation rather than an ultimatum'.
The letter comes after hundreds of doctors sent selfies to Mr Hunt on the weekend asking if he'd clocked off and declaring #ImInWorkJeremy.
That sparked open letters from medics which went viral on Facebook, including one from 34-year-old Janis Burns.
She blasted the £7,000 MPs' pay rise and complained many doctors earn less than the £41,000 for managers in coffee chain Pret a Manger.
One furious nurse on £26,000 writing told Mirror Online of the horrors of an average shift - comforting a dead patients' wife as she collapsed screaming in hysterics.
And junior doctor Benjamin Carter blasted Jeremy Hunt as a 'totalitarian Disney villain', telling him: "My colleagues have children that they only fleetingly see because of work."
Mr Kapoor's open letter details his on-call availability supplement.
That payment is believed to be over and above any salary when doctors are actually called in to work - a part which Mr Kapoor declined to release.
He added: "I am very happy about working in the NHS. My post was not about money or complaining.
"It is purely to highlight that we do work very hard as NHS staff, we do work weekends, we don't complain. We deserve to be respected in any conversation about the future of the NHS."
His original letter said: "My on calls per month add approximately 120 hours of work in addition to my normal working week.
"This is made up of being on call one day per week and one weekend in 5 - 5pm on Friday to 8am on Monday.
"Simple maths says that works out as £2.61 per hour - significantly less than the minimum wage let alone the living wage.
"I have never looked to opt out, even though financially it would make sense.
"I am genuinely offended that you have openly questioned my professionalism and vocation or that of my colleagues.
"I am no different to the thousands of Consultants, Junior Doctors, Nurses, Physios, Pharmacists, Secretaries, Speech Therapists, etc.
"We don't go on strike, we don't hold the country to ransom, we don't compromise patient care because we were meant to go home 2 hours ago.
"Instead we go above and beyond, understanding the true meaning of professionalism and being exemplar to any health service in the world.
"Without this silent and diligent commitment, the NHS would have have crumbled many years ago."
He also joined many doctors in challenging Mr Hunt to release figures on how many consultants actually opt out of weekends.
"I have looked on the Department of health Website, on NHS England and can find no details on this," he said.
"It is self evident that either your expert advisers are missing or your speech writers incompetent.
"As a workforce we are very understanding and forgiving. We are often verbally and even physically abused by people who are confused and clearly don't understand how they got into such a state; we forgive them and do our best to fix them.
"I would urge you to simply apologise for the language you have used, and look to engage in a conversation rather than an ultimatum.
"I, my colleagues and the Royal Colleges and agree with the principle of the NHS working efficiently every day of the week.
"The NHS has spoken clearly that the current proposals do not address the problem, and are not a viable solution."
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