TwiceAsNice
So do I! I don’t know if it still happens but other nationals also flew here for treatment when they could get away with it. It’s wrong and unaffordable . Waiting lists for people who live here are so long now . Treatments available at local surgeries are also no longer available. For example I now pay privately for podiatry and ear syringing appointments which were freely available to me before. Also now have to have Diabetic retinopathy yearly check at another facility ( changes every year) instead of local GP.
Sorry I know this is off on a tangent but as you can’t drive after retinopathy test it causes a lot of inconvenience each time arranging transport etc.
As long as they have paid into the system, I cannot see a problem with this i.e. they are of pensionable age. Anyone younger than that should pay. However, I have more concerns with Tourist Patients that come to the UK just to have treatment (i.e. some years ago a lady came to have her triplets here) - I have just found the headlines which read "Nigerian woman, 43, racks up £500,000 NHS bill after giving birth to IVF quadruplets in London hospital after going into labour on flight to Heathrow - hours after she was turned away from the US" This was back in 2017 and is still going on. I know that the BMA ruled that they would NOT play a part on checking the immigration status of patients. They say it is a Border Control issue. Whilst I agree with this, it is not the Border Control who are treating them. The NHS are always shouting how they have insufficient funds, and it would be really interesting to find out how much of that budget is used to treating illegal and tourist patients.