The Independent

Javid: Patients should be charged for visiting GP

- SOPHIE WINGATE

Patients should be charged for GP appointmen­ts and A&E visits, Sajid Javid has said, as he called the present model of the NHS “unsustaina­ble”.

The former health secretary said “extending the contributo­ry principle” should be part of radical reforms to tackle growing

waiting times.

In an op-ed for The Times, he called for a “grown-up, hardheaded conversati­on” about revamping the health service, noting that “too often the appreciati­on for the NHS has become a religious fervour and a barrier to reform”.

The prime minister is not “currently” considerin­g the proposals, Downing Street told the newspaper.

During his campaign for the Tory leadership, Rishi Sunak set out plans to fine patients who miss GP and hospital appointmen­ts £10.

But he backtracke­d on the pledge after it was widely criticised by health leaders, signalling the controvers­y surroundin­g any reforms that could threaten the principle of free NHS care at the point of need.

Mr Javid said that the NHS’s only rationing mechanism – to make people wait – should be replaced by means-tested fees, while “protecting those on low incomes”.

“We should look, on a cross-party basis, at extending the contributo­ry principle,” he wrote.

“This conversati­on will not be easy, but it can help the NHS ration its finite supply more effectivel­y.”

He pointed to Ireland’s “nominal” €75 fees for going to an injury unit without a referral, and £20 fees for GP appointmen­ts in Norway and Sweden as possible models.

“Too often the appreciati­on for the NHS has become a religious fervour and a barrier to reform,” the Bromsgrove MP also said.

“We need to shake off the constraint­s of political discourse and start having a grown-up, hard-headed conversati­on about alternativ­es.”

Mr Javid, who will not stand at the next election, argued that “the 75-year-old model of the NHS is unsustaina­ble”.

There are increased calls for an overhaul of the NHS, and not just from within the Tory party.

Labour’s shadow health secretary Wes Streeting told The Guardian: “Reform is not a Conservati­ve word.

“In recent elections, the left has given a lot of people the impression the answer to everything is to pour more money in. Of course investment is needed in the NHS, but ask any patient about their miserable experience­s and it’s partly about culture and systems. That’s got to change too.”

Following weeks of speculatio­n over whether Mr Sunak pays to skip NHS queues to see a doctor, he recently said that, while he was registered with an NHS GP, he had paid for private healthcare in the past.

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 ?? (PA) ?? The former health secretary argued that the NHS system of rationing by queues must be replaced by fees
(PA) The former health secretary argued that the NHS system of rationing by queues must be replaced by fees
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