Some services available at The Rycote Practice are not NHS services, and
as a result if you need one of these services you can be charged for it.
Below is an explanation of why we make charges for some things.
For a list of charges please click
here.
Isn’t the NHS supposed to be free?
The National Health Service provides most health care to most
people free of charge, but there are exceptions: prescription charges
have existed since 1951 and there are a number of other services for
which fees are charged.
Sometimes the charge is made to cover some of the cost of treatment, for
example, dental fees; in other cases, it is because the service is not
covered by the NHS, for example, providing copies of health records or
producing medical reports for insurance companies.
Surely the doctor is being paid anyway?
It is important to understand that many GPs are not employed by the NHS;
they are self-employed and have to cover their own costs – staff,
buildings, heating, lighting, etc – in the same way as any small
business. The NHS covers these costs for NHS work, but non-NHS work
there is no payment from the NHS. The fees charged by GPs contribute
towards their costs in these cases.
What is covered by the NHS and what is not?
The Government’s contract with GPs covers medical services to NHS
patients, including the provision of ongoing medical treatment. In
recent years, however, more and more organisations have been involving
doctors in a whole range of non-medical work. Sometimes the only reason
that GPs are asked is because they are in a position of trust in the
community, or because an insurance company or employer wants to ensure
that information provided to them is true and accurate.
Examples of non-NHS services for which GPs can charge their own NHS
patients are:
Accident/sickness certificates for insurance purposes
Reports for health clubs to certify that patients are fit to exercise
Pre-employment and HGV medicals, as requested by employers
Private prescriptions, e.g. for malaria
Examples of non-NHS services for which GPs can charge other institutions
are:
Life assurance and income protection reports for insurance companies
Some reports for the Department For Work and Pensions (DWP)
Medical reports for local authorities in connection with adoption and
fostering
Do GPs have to do non-NHS work for their patients?
With certain limited exceptions, for example a GP confirming that one of
their patients is not fit for jury service, GPs do not have to carry out
non-NHS work on behalf of their patients. Whilst GPs will always attempt
to assist their patients with the completion of forms, for example for
insurance purposes, they are not required to do such non-NHS work.
Is it true that the British Medical Association (BMA) sets fees
for non-NHS work?
The BMA suggests fees that GPs may charge their patients for non-NHS
work (i.e. work not covered under their contract with the NHS) in order
to help GPs set their own professional fees. However, the fees suggested
by the BMA are intended for guidance only; they are not recommendations
and a doctor is not obliged to charge the rates suggested.
I only need the doctor’s signature – what is the problem?
When a doctor signs a certificate or completes a report, it is a
condition of remaining on the Medical Register that they only sign what
they know to be true. In order to complete even the simplest of forms,
therefore, the doctor might have to check the patient’s entire medical
record. Carelessness or an inaccurate report can have serious
consequences for the doctor with the General Medical Council (the
doctors’ regulatory body) or even the Police.
What can I do to help?
Not all documents need a signature by a doctor, for example, passport
applications. You can ask another person in a position of trust to sign
such documents free of charge. If you have several forms requiring
completion, present them all at once and ask your GP if he or she is
prepared to complete them at the same time to speed up the process. Do
not expect your GP to process forms overnight: urgent requests may mean
that a doctor has to make special arrangements to process the form
quickly, and this will cost more.
What will I be charged?
The BMA recommends that practices tell patients in advance if
they will be charged, and what the fee will be. It is up to individual
practices to decide how much they will charge, but the BMA produces
lists of suggested fees which many practices use. You can find a copy of
our fee list by clicking the link below. There is also a copy in the
waiting room at the practice.
What report work doesn’t have to be done by my GP?
There is some medical examination and report work that can be done by
any doctor, not only a patient’s GP. For this work there are no set or
recommended fees.
Click
Here For a List of Fees