Earlier
this week health secretary Jeremy Hunt has announced that these charges will be
added to the immigration bill passing through parliament.
Currently,
temporary migrants who come to the UK either to study or to work, are likely to
qualify for free hospital care as soon as they enter the British border.
Back
in July, the NHS estimated the cost of health tourism at £12 million.
Mr Hunt,
who suggested foreigners cost Britain £2 billion a year, instead, had also highlighted
that the NHS is a national health service, not an international one and it should
be fair on the British families and taxpayers.
EU
visitors would continue to access free NHS treatments but ministers are
planning to put in place systems for recovering the costs from their home
countries.
Jeremy
Hunt has proposed a new ‘registration and tracking system’ for visitors before
they join a GP surgery, possibly linked to the NHS number.
Those without a
formal residency status could be charged for non-emergency public healthcare and
should be issued a temporary NHS number.
Meanwhile,
those who work in the national healthcare have pointed out that all the checks
potentially put into place to avoid that short-term migrants benefit from the
system, along with the proposed ‘tracking system’, could cost far more than they
save.
In fact, all these
measures could possibly turn the medical staff into groups of border security officials.