Brendan Burgess
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Over the last two days, I have heard both Eoin O'Broin of Sinn Féin and Róisín Shortall of the Social Democrats say the following:
1) Public hospitals are under pressure to maximise fee income from patients with private health insurance
2) So they give them priority which disadvantages the public patients.
I don't believe that this is true anymore.
It's certainly not true in A&E
If you go in through A&E, you will be treated irrespective of whether you have private health insurance or not. You will be admitted to a bed based on your medical need.
If a public patient needs to be admitted, they will be put into whatever bed is available - public or private.
I don't think it's true of waiting lists either
It used to be true of waiting lists. Consultants had separate waiting lists for private and public patients. They, and the hospitals, prioritised the private list as they earned fees from it.
But there is only one waiting list now.
Even if you see a consultant privately, 3 months ahead of someone who sees him publicly, he must not put you ahead of the public patient. In other words, seeing a consultant privately has no advantage in a public hospital.
This is discussed more fully here:
"Can I see a consultant privately, and then go public for the procedure?"
Of course, going to a private hospital is quicker than going to a public hospital.
But that is a separate argument.
1) Public hospitals are under pressure to maximise fee income from patients with private health insurance
2) So they give them priority which disadvantages the public patients.
I don't believe that this is true anymore.
It's certainly not true in A&E
If you go in through A&E, you will be treated irrespective of whether you have private health insurance or not. You will be admitted to a bed based on your medical need.
If a public patient needs to be admitted, they will be put into whatever bed is available - public or private.
I don't think it's true of waiting lists either
It used to be true of waiting lists. Consultants had separate waiting lists for private and public patients. They, and the hospitals, prioritised the private list as they earned fees from it.
But there is only one waiting list now.
Even if you see a consultant privately, 3 months ahead of someone who sees him publicly, he must not put you ahead of the public patient. In other words, seeing a consultant privately has no advantage in a public hospital.
This is discussed more fully here:
"Can I see a consultant privately, and then go public for the procedure?"
Of course, going to a private hospital is quicker than going to a public hospital.
But that is a separate argument.