The government has announced a ban on patients paying for private transplant surgery using organs donated within the NHS. Ministers have accepted the recommendations of an independent report commissioned by the government after concerns that foreign patients were bypassing lengthy NHS waiting lists by paying up to £75 000 ({euro}90 000; $130 000) for a transplantation. Earlier this year it was revealed that the livers of 50 British NHS donors were transplanted into foreign patients over a two year period, with the bulk of the operations taking place in London at King’s College Hospital and the Royal Free Hospital.
Hospital patients in England will get the legal right to be seen privately if they face NHS delays. Hospitals have to start treating patients within 18 weeks of referral - or two weeks in the case of cancer. But ministers will now give patients a legal right to private care - or treatment at another NHS centre if so desired - if this does not happen. The Tories, who would scrap waiting time targets, said it was an "unaffordable and uncosted" pledge.
Doctors' leaders warn situation could diminish patient trust and lead to more NHS services being run by private operators. GPs preparing to take charge of £60bn of NHS funds have been found to have shareholdings in private healthcare firms, prompting alarm about family doctors profiting from direct conflicts of interest.
One in three GPs in clinical commissioning groups are linked to private firms, study finds One in three GPs who are running new organisations that are about to be given £65bn of the NHS's budget also help run or hold shares in a private healthcare firm, a study shows. The disclosure has sparked concern that such widespread conflicts of interest will threaten patients' trust in GPs, who they may see as lining their own pockets out of public funds.