Britain’s NHS is seeking to charge co-pays for certain patients. Up to now, NHS has always claimed to be “free” for everyone . . . Free at the point of service, anyway. (I suggest you read the entire linked article. Its headline is a bit misleading.)
While charging of co-pays would be a departure, it should come as no great surprise. In the first place, NHS financial problems have been public for quite a while. And, after all, NHS is just another insurance company - albeit a giant, national monopoly. Aside from the political control of its management and budgets, NHS behaves very much like private insurance companies around the world. Specifically, NHS has a large bureaucracy that determines what medical services are reimbursed, and under what terms. Also, NHS is financed by premiums that must must cover its costs - although NHS “premiums” are disguised as taxes.
And now - co-pays?
What next? Refusal to cover services of non-approved physicians and hospitals?
Will NHS end up a British HMO?