‘Scrap the charges for overseas NHS staff!’ – say Doctors for the NHS

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Doctors celebrating 70 years of the NHS demanding no borders in the service – overseas staff are being charged to use the NHS

AFTER lauding NHS workers as ‘heroes’ and giving them ‘a clap’ the Tories have upped the amount that overseas NHS and care workers and their families have to pay to use the NHS themselves!

The NHS surcharge for overseas NHS and care workers will rise to over £635 a year, which they must pay for themselves and each family member as well as the cost of their UK visas.
This means that for a frontline nurse from overseas here, for instance, with their partner and three children will have to pay £3,125 to use the very institution they are working in – the NHS.
Doctors’ campaigning group Doctors for the NHS (DFNHS) yesterday condemned Tory Home Secretary Priti Patel’s decision not to scrap the NHS surcharge for overseas NHS and care workers, despite the fact that these ‘essential front-line, key’ workers pay the same tax and national insurance as anyone else doing their job.
DFNHS Chair, ophthalmic consultant surgeon Dr Colin Hutchinson, said yesterday: ‘Let me get this straight. We have a crisis in our health and care services. Before Covid we were already short of 100,000 NHS staff and 120,000 social care staff.
‘We cut the training places for doctors and nurses in 2010, so we don’t have enough homegrown graduates and there is a global shortage of doctors, nurses and other health professionals. Most western countries are trying to attract trained workers to their shores, so what cunning plan do we have to entice them to consider the UK as the best place to live and work?
‘We already sting them for visa fees of £1,220 for five years for every member of their family and £406 to register with the General Medical Council. In addition, every member of the family has to pay £400 a year healthcare surcharge, and these all have to be paid up front. Despite pleas, the Home Secretary is increasing the surcharge to £625 per year, for access to the very health and care services they have come to support.
‘Like every family, they will already be paying National Insurance, Income Tax, VAT and all the other taxes that go to fund the NHS and the care system, so why do we expect them to pay extra for access to the services they are helping to sustain? The surcharge needs to go, now.
‘The cost of coming to work in our health and care services is far greater than moving to Australia, Canada, France or Germany, all of which are fishing from the same pool, so why would anybody choose the UK. Ten out of ten for optimism, but minus five thousand for joined-up thinking. Give them a clap.’

  • Making defendants state their nationality is ‘racialising’ UK courts, a new report has concluded. A study compiled by Commons, a not-for-profit London law firm, of the Policing and Crime Act 2017 finds 96% of lawyers do not support it.

Introduced by Tory PM of the time Theresa May as part of her ‘hostile environment’ policy to deport more foreign criminals, section 162 of the Act makes it a criminal offence, punishable by up to 51 weeks in prison, not to provide the court with details of nationality or give inaccurate information on first appearance.
The study examined more than 500 cases across England and suggested the law was creating ‘racialised courtrooms’.