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Decision to increase immigration health surcharge is ‘morally bankrupt’, RCN says

Fee for using NHS for nurses from outside the European Economic Area will double to £400

Fee for using NHS for nurses from outside the European Economic Area will double to £400 in January


RCN acting general secretary Dame Donna Kinnair: ‘These fees can tear families apart.’

Protests from nurses have failed to reverse a government decision to double the fee that overseas nurses and their families must pay to access NHS services. 

Yesterday MPs voted in favour of increasing the immigration health surcharge, payable by people coming to the UK from countries outside the European Economic Area (EEA). 

Counting the cost

From 2019, overseas nursing staff will have to pay £400 a year, up from the current fee of £200, for themselves and for each family member – a cost which the RCN said signalled that international nurses were no longer welcome in the UK.

Latest figures show there are just over 70,000 nurses on the Nursing and Midwifery Council register whose initial registration was outside the EEA.

Hostile environment

RCN acting general secretary Dame Donna Kinnair said: ‘The very people who deliver healthcare should be the last people to have to pay spiralling extra charges for it.’

She accused the government of creating a hostile environment for nurses from beyond the EEA who come to work in the UK. She added that these staff members already contribute financially through national insurance and taxation.

Professor Kinnair concluded: ‘These fees can tear families apart, separating mother from child.’

The government has defended the £400 surcharge, saying it better reflects the estimated £470 a year the NHS spends, on average, treating each of those who are required to pay it. 

Sustainable service

Immigration minister Caroline Nokes said: ‘We welcome long-term migrants using the NHS, but the health service is a national, not international, health service and we believe it is right that they make a fair contribution to its long-term sustainability.’

Although the fee rise has been supported in the House of Commons, Professor Kinnair said the RCN would be lobbying peers in the House of Lords to ‘send a message to the government that this morally bankrupt decision is completely unacceptable’. 


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