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I have a friend whose father had to go to an NHS hospital after chest pains. It was not a pre-existing condition and his insurer (Tata AIG) paid for a procedure (doctors advised against travel before the procedure was done). The "excess" was about £100 -- this was 3 years ago.wpongal wrote:we recently had parents visit us from asia, they had to access accident&emergency facility due to a relapse of existing condition. on discharge, they were advised to travel to India. they have now returned to india ..only to find a heavy NHS bill.
has anyone in the past undergone this kind of an experience, what are the options available in such circumstances?
As a layperson, my read of this is -- normally genuine medical emergencies are treated free, that is any A&E (Accident and Emergency wing) outpatient care is free. In-patient & follow-up care has to be paid for and you should have medical insurance for this.A charge cannot be made or recovered from any overseas visitor for...
...accident and emergency (A&E) services, this includes all A&E services provided at an
NHS hospital, e.g. those provided at an accident & emergency department, walk-in centre
or urgent healthcare centre. This does not include those emergency services provided
after the overseas visitor has been accepted as an inpatient, or at a follow-up outpatient
appointment, for which charges must be levied unless the overseas visitor is exempt from
charge in their own right...