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NHS Treatment


saintdomingo

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There has been mention and some discussion over UK Citizens (possibly only applying to pensioners) who have been away from the UK over 3 years no longer qualifying for free treatment.

 

Is it a rule but a rarely enforced one.?

 

Anyone with knowledge or experience on this matter care to comment.

 

I am not saying treatment would be refused but would be chargeable, I have seen comments a few years ago, some naysayers and some saying that there have been a few crackdowns.

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4 hours ago, proton said:

If these lying illegal immigrant boat people arriving in the UK with no passports are eligible then i'm certainly going to make sure I am, after paying national insurance for 40 years!


No need for right wing nonsense in a factual thread, thank you.

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5 hours ago, josephbloggs said:


I have been in Thailand for 28 years and haven't paid NI in that time. I am currently on a two week visit to the UK. I needed to visit A&E a few days ago which I wasn't happy about as I don't like to burden services, but I needed to. I went to the registration desk and was honest and told them upfront that I am a UK citizen but not a resident, and I have lived abroad for 28 years with no UK address (other than family). They asked if I had a GP, I said no.  I had my passport with me but wasn't asked for it. They were happy to accept my brother's address as that is where I was staying at the time.

Long story short, no further questions asked. I spent several hours there (mostly waiting), had an ECG, blood tests, an examination, and finally was dispatched with some medicine with advice to come back the next day if not improved. (I didn't go back).

All free, all service was great if a lot slower than Thailand. I was honest upfront as I expected I might have to pay - and rightfully so as I have not contributed NI since I lived here 28+ years ago - but no problem, all looked after, all free. And I didn't try to game the system, I was honest upfront without being asked.

Interesting and thanks for your information. I'm pleased you were tested, examined and received medication that was obviously effective. I'm guessing they accepted your case was an 'emergency'. Therefore, everyone regardless of residential status is entitled to free treatment. If they hadn't, they might have moved heaven and earth to get you out of the door without spending any money, telling you to go to your GP. The fact you'd told them you weren't registered with one may (or may not) have made any difference. We shall never know that.

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10 hours ago, Sheryl said:

To my understanding, the policy is that people who have been living abroad are not eligible unless they have permanently returned to the UK i,e, returned with "intent to permanently remain. "  Obviously intent can not be objectively proven, it comes down to what the person states.

 

Some people just maintain their registration with a UK GP and a UK address so have no problem.

 

There have been board members who returned to UK for urgent treatment apparently without problem, but I have also heard io people running into refusal. Mainly these were people who advertised the fact that they lived in Thailand.

 

If you can maintain a UK address (family, friend etc) and registration with a GP that would be advisable, If you cannot, remember that the rule is "intent to resttle permanently in UK",

 

And if planning to rely on returning for NHS care in case of need for medical care, make sure you have at least travel insurance. In an emergency you may not be stable enough to fly.

Very good information (as always), thanks Sheryl. I can advise that when checking-in for an outpatient appointment at my UK NHS hospital the check-in machine asks; 'Have you been resident in the UK for at least the previous six months?'. The answer options are limited to yes or no.    

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10 hours ago, Sheryl said:

To my understanding, the policy is that people who have been living abroad are not eligible unless they have permanently returned to the UK i,e, returned with "intent to permanently remain. "  Obviously intent can not be objectively proven, it comes down to what the person states.

 

Some people just maintain their registration with a UK GP and a UK address so have no problem.

 

There have been board members who returned to UK for urgent treatment apparently without problem, but I have also heard io people running into refusal. Mainly these were people who advertised the fact that they lived in Thailand.

 

If you can maintain a UK address (family, friend etc) and registration with a GP that would be advisable, If you cannot, remember that the rule is "intent to resttle permanently in UK",

 

And if planning to rely on returning for NHS care in case of need for medical care, make sure you have at least travel insurance. In an emergency you may not be stable enough to fly.

 

 

I returned for a hernia op and had no issues. 

 

The key for me was still being registered with my doctor. He examined the hernia and made the referral.

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1 hour ago, hotandsticky said:

 

 

I returned for a hernia op and had no issues. 

 

The key for me was still being registered with my doctor. He examined the hernia and made the referral.

I had a left inguinal hernia repair (with mesh inserted) by UK NHS in 2000. Despite reading some stories I've had no problems since. Did you obtain a quote for this operation in Thailand? However, I suppose if you were returning to UK anyway........

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3 hours ago, The Fugitive said:

Very good information (as always), thanks Sheryl. I can advise that when checking-in for an outpatient appointment at my UK NHS hospital the check-in machine asks; 'Have you been resident in the UK for at least the previous six months?'. The answer options are limited to yes or no.    

 

I leave it to you to decide what to do in that case.

 

A "No" answer will lead to problems/visit not being covered under NHS for hospital care.

 

I recently spent 2 months in the UK as a visitor along with a family member who has no regular insurance so researched carefully NHS policy on non-residents/tourist. 

 

For non-residents (including former UK residents living abroad, as well as tourists etc) A&E visits are free as are GP visits, but hospital care is not. See  https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/how-the-nhs-charges-overseas-visitors-for-nhs-hospital-care/how-the-nhs-charges-overseas-visitors-for-nhs-hospital-care

 

I can verify from first hand experience that this is true, and also that visit to "urgent care" centers are also free, I guess classed as GP care. At least was in the Urgent Care I used.

 

Of course the free GP care presumes you are registered with a GP or can become so, and it is up to GPs whether to accept  new registration of non-residents/temporary visitors. In the case of the family member who accompanied me and was staying a full 6 months, one GP rejected her registration but another accepted her.

 

To my understanding the free GP care does not extend to care from a specialist if GP has to refer you to one.

 

Basically, to be covered for specialist care/ hospital care you need to be able to either:

 

- present yourself as a UK resident and not mention having been out of the country. If coming back to UK on a regular basis and maintaining a UK address and GP registration, this is frankly what I would do.

 

- present yourself as having lived abroad and now returned with intention of permanently remaning

 

-have travel insurance that covers you for hospital care while in UK

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3 hours ago, The Fugitive said:

I had a left inguinal hernia repair (with mesh inserted) by UK NHS in 2000. Despite reading some stories I've had no problems since. Did you obtain a quote for this operation in Thailand? However, I suppose if you were returning to UK anyway........

 

No, I wasn't returning.

 

 

I had the hernia op in Korat (an excellent recommendation from Sheryl), first class treatment - unfortunately it didn't work and I wasn't going to pay another 205,000 Baht. 

 

 

I timed a holiday visit to enable me to see the local GP in the knowledge that the op date should fall into my Christmas visit. I had to make one extra visit for the hospital consultation but managed to do the pre-op stuff remotely.

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6 minutes ago, hotandsticky said:

No, I wasn't returning.

I had the hernia op in Korat (an excellent recommendation from Sheryl), first class treatment - unfortunately it didn't work and I wasn't going to pay another 205,000 Baht. 

I timed a holiday visit to enable me to see the local GP in the knowledge that the op date should fall into my Christmas visit. I had to make one extra visit for the hospital consultation but managed to do the pre-op stuff remotely.

Thanks for replying. I'm surprised and sorry your operation in Thailand wasn't a success. I would have done the same as you and gone for the operation here too.  From what I've been told hernia repair is very common and doesn't present any challenges for surgeons.

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19 minutes ago, The Fugitive said:

Thanks for replying. I'm surprised and sorry your operation in Thailand wasn't a success. I would have done the same as you and gone for the operation here too.  From what I've been told hernia repair is very common and doesn't present any challenges for surgeons.

 

 

I was disappointed too because the whole process had been so smooth....whether mesh was not used? I don't know.

 

I had quotations from Surin hospital around 80,000 Baht (2016) but I chose Bangkok Hospital Korat partly on the advice of Sheryl who recommended a larger facility in the event of any complications arising.

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On 6/24/2024 at 3:26 AM, josephbloggs said:


I have been in Thailand for 28 years and haven't paid NI in that time. I am currently on a two week visit to the UK. I needed to visit A&E a few days ago which I wasn't happy about as I don't like to burden services, but I needed to. I went to the registration desk and was honest and told them upfront that I am a UK citizen but not a resident, and I have lived abroad for 28 years with no UK address (other than family). They asked if I had a GP, I said no.  I had my passport with me but wasn't asked for it. They were happy to accept my brother's address as that is where I was staying at the time.

Long story short, no further questions asked. I spent several hours there (mostly waiting), had an ECG, blood tests, an examination, and finally was dispatched with some medicine with advice to come back the next day if not improved. (I didn't go back).

All free, all service was great if a lot slower than Thailand. I was honest upfront as I expected I might have to pay - and rightfully so as I have not contributed NI since I lived here 28+ years ago - but no problem, all looked after, all free. And I didn't try to game the system, I was honest upfront without being asked.

 

Much more importantly, why have you stopped your NI contributions?

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