Scottish health boards owed £3.2m by foreign patients

Scottish health boards are owed more than £3.2 million by patients from outwith the European Economic Area who have not paid for treatment over the last five years, a Holyrood committee has found.
Picture: OLI SCARFF/AFP/Getty ImagesPicture: OLI SCARFF/AFP/Getty Images
Picture: OLI SCARFF/AFP/Getty Images

Health boards could also recoup more than £700,000 a year if they participated in a scheme to report usage of the NHS by holders of the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC), according to a report.

The Scottish Parliament’s health and sport committee has raised concerns that NHS boards are missing out on “vital sums of money” because they cannot identify those entitled to NHS care.

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Only those people who are not “ordinarily resident” in the UK are charged for using NHS services, however it is currently not necessary for a GP to establish a person’s country of origin before treating them. The committee is calling on the Scottish Government to establish a standardised approach to identifying those not eligible for free NHS treatment, warning that boards are potentially losing out on “significant revenue”.

Lewis Macdonald MSP, convener of the health and sport committee, said: “The committee support the principle that anybody in Scotland can access GP services or A&E departments free of charge when needed. However, we are concerned that NHS boards are missing out on vital sums of money to which they are due by not being able to identify those entitled to NHS care.”
The report identified an inconsistent approach from NHS health boards in Scotland, with some not reclaiming costs from those not entitled to free care. The Scottish Parliament Information Centre has calculated that individuals who are not from within the European Economic Area (EEA) owe more than £3.2mto boards for treatment which has not been paid for over the past five years. The committee also showed that not all health boards are participating in the EHIC Incentive Scheme, whereby NHS boards can claim back 25 per cent of the treatment costs of EHIC card holders.

NHS figures provided in December 2018 showed that £5m worth of treatment, for 4,841 individuals, had been reported to the Department for Work and Pensions by participating boards since 2014, which resulted in £1.25m being reimbursed to those boards.

The committee said if all boards participated in the scheme the average amount coming back to them could be £710,000 a year. A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: “We are committed to ensuring that life-saving care will be provided as a priority before checking residency.”