Showing posts with label ETHIC Card. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ETHIC Card. Show all posts

The EHIC Card and Private Medicine in Europe

Posted by Unknown on Thursday, June 18, 2015

EHIC Card
EHIC Card
Some people head off overseas on holiday or business trips clutching their EHIC card confident in the belief that it will cover them for any medical costs they might incur.

In fact, it's a little more complicated than that.

Keep in mind

At the outset, there are three critically important points to keep in mind when reading this article:

1. The EHIC card (European Health Insurance Card) is only valid for European Union countries plus one or two others associated with it. Nothing in what follows applies to medical treatment outside of the EU.

2. The position with the use of this card may vary considerably depending upon which of the EU member states you are in. That's because their health systems are different and therefore just what the card will do for you will vary.

3. The subject area of this article has been subject to inter-governmental squabbling for some years and that looks likely to continue. So, what is accurate today might not be totally accurate tomorrow.

Public versus private health

In general terms, the system is intended to give European Union citizens travelling in another EU country the right to access any freely-provided emergency medical services made available by the country concerned to their own citizens. That access should be free if it is also free to local citizens.

Now although it isn't entirely explicitly stated, there is an inbuilt assumption that such services are provided by the state. For example, in the United Kingdom, accident and emergency services are almost exclusively provided by the NHS, as opposed to private hospitals. Private hospitals in the UK tend to be aimed exclusively at non-critical treatment or that which is elective in nature.

So, in the UK a visitor from another EU country who was in urgent need of medical attention would almost certainly obtain it from a public health service GP or perhaps an accident and emergency unit. As publicly provided services, these are largely entirely free of charge to a UK citizen, so they would also be covered by the visiting EU citizen's EHIC card.

Things aren't the same everywhere

Unfortunately, in some other European countries, the distinction between public and private treatment can be rather more blurred. In some countries, private hospitals may provide certain components of treatment that might normally be offered by the NHS in the UK. The citizens may be able to choose between going to a public hospital or GP, and therefore pay nothing all, or going to a private hospital or GP and paying for their treatment or making a substantial contribution to it.

What this means for you

The position is exceptionally complicated but broadly speaking, if you accidentally choose to use a private hospital or private doctor when travelling in the European Union, you may find that they won't accept your EHIC card. You also typically will not be able to reclaim your expenditure upon your return to the UK.

There is no universal answer to this potential problem other than to be aware of it and to make sure that you take advice abroad when seeking urgent treatment. Make sure you ask the doctor or institution concerned (in advance where practical and safe) whether they are a public or private operation and whether they will take an EHIC card.

P.K. Chong is the Managing Director of All About EHIC. As a major insurance authority, we provide information and top up insurance for those travellers with an EHIC card, (European Health Insurance Card). Our excellent top up insurance covers issues not covered by the EHIC card.
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Watch Out for Fraud on the EHIC Card

Posted by Unknown

Fraud on the EHIC Card
The EHIC Card
It's incredible just how scammers can spot an opportunity; one such area they've recently moved into is that of the EHIC card.

A quick refresher
Just in case you didn't know it, if you are a citizen of the United Kingdom and are travelling to another European Union country, then any emergency treatment medical costs you incur will typically be paid for free of charge under the European Health Insurance Card system.

If really is as simple as that! The only caveat to keep in mind is that this assumes that similar urgent treatment would be free to the local citizens of the country you are visiting. So, if they would get it free of charge under their state scheme, then so would you.

Where the scams operate
The EHIC card is available entirely free of charge from the NHS and can be applied for through their website. You have nothing at all to pay. Unfortunately, some opportunists consistently offer services relating to 'obtaining' this card for you and they will typically charge you a fee for doing so.

Although this article should not be seen as qualified legal advice, there does not appear to be anything obviously illegal about this. What you should be questioning though is why you are paying someone to do something for you that you could do yourself for free at the click of a few buttons on the NHS website?

What makes some of these services objectionable is that they may imply that somehow this process of getting an EHIC card is difficult, complicated or bureaucratic and that they will be doing something to help you cut through all that and obtain a card quicker than you could get it yourself. That is misleading.

A few complications
The process is simple and straightforward for the vast majority of applicants. There are however a few potential complications that can arise.

Those might include circumstances, such as if you are not a citizen of the European Union; you are a citizen of another EU country who has not yet had time to become registered on the various UK social security systems; or you are not a UK citizen but your children are.

In all these cases, there are procedures and processes to follow which are comprehensively dealt with on the web site of the NHS. You should not need to pay any third party to intervene on your behalf or to act as an intermediary between you and the National Health Service. In some cases, your citizens' advice bureau may be able to offer you specific advice on some of the above scenarios.

The EHIC card is essentially a very simple system and it is a great shame these scams are being perpetrated. If you are in any doubt whatsoever, try contacting the NHS through their above-mentioned website.

P.K. Chong is the Managing Director of All About EHIC. As a major insurance authority, we provide information and top up insurance for those travellers with an EHIC card, (European Health Insurance Card). Our excellent top up insurance covers issues not covered by the EHIC card.
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