Thought for the day. June 20. Charge foreigners for using the NHS. By David Davies MP

A few years ago my Hungarian girlfriend, (now wife) woke up needing a doctor. “How much will it cost?” she asked. I laughed at the preposterousness of the question. “This is Britain. It doesn’t cost anything”. But she persisted in asking for cash. “Of course they don’t charge you”, she said, “but I’m not British. I don’t pay any taxes here. I haven’t got any health insurance.”In vain I patiently explained that regardless of all this, there was not the slightest chance that she would be billed for using our NHS. Indeed I doubt whether our GP surgery even has a till or a means of collecting money. So certain was she that no country would be so stupid as to allow anyone to walk in and use its health service, that I had to give her twenty pounds before she walked down for her appointment.
   
Herein lies a major problem afflicting the NHS, or rather the Inter- National Health Service. We will treat literally anyone in the world who happens to be passing, with not a thought for their right to receive very costly treatment, which has been paid for by British taxpayers.
    
The government funded “Visit Britain” website which is supposed to generate money for our nation, actually advertises to the world that “you are eligible for free emergency treatment in the Accident and Emergency departments of National Health Service hospitals.”! It goes on to state that foreign visitors (with many exceptions) will be charged for after-care. But of course nobody ever pays. An official might make a half-hearted attempt to chase up a large debt from someone living in the third world who has given a false name and address. He or she will fail.
   
Other countries do it differently.  We Brits are expected to have our own health insurance when travelling outside the EU. The travel section of the Foreign Office website makes it quite clear that even if not compulsory, for a number of countries it is “absolutely essential” as their own healthcare systems are so poor. Bizarrely, we have reciprocal arrangements with some of those very countries!
   
We cannot expect doctors and nurses to refuse treatment to those in need just because they have no right to it. Nobody would want to see people dying in the streets though lack of medical treatment, not even when they have flagrantly abused the system - for example by arriving here 34 weeks pregnant from the other side of the world in order to have their baby in an NHS hospital, as many do.
   
A simple measure would put a halt to much of this abuse. We should insist that absolutely everyone arriving here from outside the EU, should be in receipt of a verifiable health insurance document that could be checked by immigration officials.
  
At a stroke we would put an end to a great deal of freeloading on our public services.
   
The idea is so simple it needs no more than a sentence to sum it up. It would be fair and would do no more than to bring Britain into line with the rest of the world. It would save the NHS tens of millions of pounds each year which could instead be spent treating British patients.
  
The phrase “free at the point of use” is usually associated with the Beveridge report which led to the establishment of the NHS. Had they foreseen the era of cheap international travel those writing it would surely have wanted to add the words – “to all who are entitled.”
  
I never did find out what happened to the £20 I gave the future Mrs Davies. It certainly didn’t go to the GP.
  
 

6 Responses to “Thought for the day. June 20. Charge foreigners for using the NHS. By David Davies MP”


  1. 1 Chad Noble June 20, 2007 at 5:40 pm

    Common sense. How refreshing.

    Run it by CCHQ and I’m sure they’ll call you delusional, reject the idea and instead offer the health tourists free broccoli.

  2. 2 Comstock June 20, 2007 at 7:19 pm

    “Before you’ve had your breakfast this morning you’ve relied on half the world” (Martin Luther King)

    If ‘Health Tourism’ is redressing the balance a little, tough, basically.

  3. 3 Teck Khong June 21, 2007 at 9:54 am

    I am a GP in one of Britain’s top 10% most deprived areas. It’s 99% home-grown white with many hard-working people, and I have looked after most for 25 years. With respect to healthcare, their growing resentment centres on their concerns about the dilution of resources available to treat them in the face of rising tide of new entrants, NHS waste aside. There are sensible and ethical processes for discouraging exploitation and abuse of the NHS, just as there are ways of making the NHS more responsive and accountable. However, the bureaucratic barriers and the flawed policies that engender them are challenges that require patient manoeuvring. As chairman of the largest GP commissioning group in the East Midlands, I hope to work with a few key agencies and make a start in the right direction. As a Conservative PPC, I would not wait for a change of Government, and as a committed professional I cannot countenance further attrition of the high quality of medicine and compassionate care that I qualified into.

  4. 4 Stuart June 24, 2007 at 5:06 pm

    Nice to know that the rest of the EU are no longer foreign.

  5. 5 camelOne October 29, 2007 at 8:41 am

    Very nice this blog =)

  6. 6 cheapcigar November 6, 2007 at 6:44 pm

    Very nice this blog =)


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