Why should you be able to claim tax relief if you want to take out private healthcare? You want it you pay for it.That's 1 logical solution. Another would be to be able to claim tax relief on private healthcare.
Why should you be able to claim tax relief if you want to take out private healthcare? You want it you pay for it.That's 1 logical solution. Another would be to be able to claim tax relief on private healthcare.
Why should you be able to claim tax relief if you want to take out private healthcare? You want it you pay for it.
How much does your private healthcare cover? As much as the NHS?I do. I wasn't the one who took the thread down that path. I merely suggested that as I pay more for the NHS that I do private, I pay through the nose for NHS service just as much as for private. A worse service too ironically.
How much does your private healthcare cover? As much as the NHS?
I wasn't going down that route, just asking. So if work is paying you're not paying the full amount then? How long before there is something that you go in for, say a knee op, that doesn't go right and you have to go down the NHS route?It doesn't cover A&E, I think we all know that. So if you were going to go down that line don't bother.
I have the comprehensive level of care for me and my family. Work covers me, I pick up the rest. Details here: https://www.bupa.co.uk/health/health-insurance/~/media/Files/MMS/bins-14200.pdf
We also have access to their online GP service and mental health services. We've used them a couple of times over the past five years and having zero waiting and fast, efficient services is really nice.
I wasn't going down that route, just asking. So if work is paying you're not paying the full amount then? How long before there is something that you go in for, say a knee op, that doesn't go right and you have to go down the NHS route?
Sounds a very good policy, I'm glad you can afford it, many can't.Work covers about 25% of the total cost. If they didn't, I would cover it. It's not significant.
If a private op goes wrong, Bupa covers getting it fixed. If you aren't satisfied with the original consultant or hospital you have access to their entire network and can select another.
Sounds a very good policy, I'm glad you can afford it, many can't.
Sorry to hear about your wife's problems but glad that they have been seen toIt is. I honestly hope that I'll always be able to afford it up until retirement. If I could afford it I'd cover my mum and dad too. My wife has had cancer issues (BRCA and Carcinoma) over the years and the private healthcare has been critical to her treatment.
Sorry to hear about your wife's problems but glad that they have been seen to
So as soon as you get a chronic condition, it no longer covers you for that condition.It doesn't cover A&E, I think we all know that. So if you were going to go down that line don't bother.
I have the comprehensive level of care for me and my family. Work covers me, I pick up the rest. Details here: https://www.bupa.co.uk/health/health-insurance/~/media/Files/MMS/bins-14200.pdf
We also have access to their online GP service and mental health services. We've used them a couple of times over the past five years and having zero waiting and fast, efficient services is really nice.
So as soon as you get a chronic condition, it no longer covers you for that condition.
The trouble is you never know what you will need in the future. How much extra would the other options add on? Would the extra cost become too much if you ever became too ill that you had to have the extras to get the treatment?You can get Chronic cover and Chronic cover plus as optional extras. I didn’t need that.
They don’t cover pre-existing conditions.
The trouble is you never know what you will need in the future. How much extra would the other options add on? Would the extra cost become too much if you ever became too ill that you had to have the extras to get the treatment?
You use the private insurance to get the diagnosis. You see the private consultation next day compared to NHS in 3 months.So as soon as you get a chronic condition, it no longer covers you for that condition.
Now that is some of the worst doctoring, was she even examined or was it put down as an over protective mum?Girl was seen 30 times by medics over three years before brain tumour diagnosis
Imogen Darby first noticed her daughter Tia's symptoms during the Covid lockdown in March 2020 when she started being sick.news.sky.com
30 times missed opportunities plus changing glasses prescription 4 times.
Something very odd there. If a single doctor had seen multiple times and not escalated, that's terrible practice. If seen and escalated to different teams (GP, A&E, pads, physio etc) then sounds like a very atypical presentation and unexpected by many clinicians. Poor girl.Now that is some of the worst doctoring, was she even examined or was it put down as an over protective mum?
True, but we had similar with our son when he was younger. He would throw up his feed and cough until he was sick when out walking. Monthly visits to the GP, in the end saw another GP who said childhood asthma.Something very odd there. If a single doctor had seen multiple times and not escalated, that's terrible practice. If seen and escalated to different teams (GP, A&E, pads, physio etc) then sounds like a very atypical presentation and unexpected by many clinicians. Poor girl.