truthseeker
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Yes, even if you have private health insurance, you are treated the same as a public patient in the public hospitals.
An ambulance will take a patient to the nearest public hospital and will not take patients to private hospitals nor will the private hospitals accept patients coming in in public ambulances.
So if you have private health insurance and can make it by car to one of the private hospitals that have an A & E facility (eg. Beacon and Blackrock Clinic), you will be seen within minutes in a clean, efficient hospital with excellent in-patient care.
The fee for the initial A & E consultation at the Beacon is €120 and if you're admitted, then your private health insurance kicks in according to the level of cover.
The A & E charge in the public hospitals is €100 if you don't have a GP referral letter and, unless you have chest pain or difficulty breathing, you can expect to wait for many hours before being seen by a doctor.
+1
But id argue the chest pain/breathing difficulties, on the night in Vincents which I posted about another man arrived just before my father in law, by ambulance also, with a suspected heart attack (his second incidentally so himself and family knew the symptoms) and after 8 hours still hadnt seen a doctor - chest pain notwithstanding.
It can depend on the A&E and time you go also. I brought a friend who broke her ankle to a VHI Swiftcare clinic, and she was seen within minutes and we were back home within a couple of hours, casted etc... She preferred to go there rather than a public A&E despite it costing more. But 2 hours versus possibly 24 hours - it was worth it to her. We met someone in there with a broken finger who had travelled from Naas, rather than go to a public A&E. My VHI actually gives me 5 visits to it at €50 euro so Id definitely use it if I had a break or needed stitches etc... but they do not handle anything to do with the heart or stroke etc...so for anything very serious, you are back to a public A&E if you call an ambulance.