'Tax on the sick': One in four hospitals increase parking fees - some by up to 200 per cent
By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 08:15, 16 March 2012 | UPDATED: 08:17, 16 March 2012
More than one in four hospital trusts have increased car parking charges, an NHS survey has found.
Some hospitals in England have raised charges by up to 200 per cent, with patients and their families and friends paying up to £3.50 an hour.
Hospital parking – which is free for most people in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – earns the NHS more than £100million a year.
Under fire: The NHS has been criticised over its car park charges
Under fire: The NHS has been criticised over its car park charges
Campaigners condemned the ‘scandalous’ rises as a ‘tax on the sick’ and urged hospitals to follow government guidelines offering concessions to patients with long term illnesses, including cancer.
The figures show 28 per cent of trusts surveyed increased their average hourly parking charge for patients and visitors from last year and only 17 per cent reduced it.
Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust charged patients 200 per cent more this year, increasing prices from 25p an hour on average to 75p an hour.
Separate analysis found some trusts charge much more than the national average (77p) for an hour’s hospital parking, based on the average from a three-hour stay.
Defence: MP Simon Burns pointed out that the charges are used for patient care
Defence: MP Simon Burns pointed out that the charges are used for patient care
Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust charges £2.50 an hour on average, with an hour’s stay costing £3.50.
Data analysts SSentif looked at figures given to the NHS Information Centre by 197 hospital and mental health trusts.
Duleep Allirajah, head of policy at Macmillan Cancer Support, said: ‘This is scandalous news that some hospital trusts are raising revenue by increasing hospital parking charges. Charging patients for using hospital car parks is a tax on illness. We want every hospital in England to comply with the Government’s guidance to provide free or concessionary parking for patients travelling regularly to hospital for treatment.’
Health Minister Simon Burns said: ‘No one should be paying extortionate amounts to park in an NHS car park.
‘But introducing free hospital car parking could cost the NHS more than £100million – money that would otherwise be spent on patient care.’
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/cars/article-2115769/Tax-sick-One-hospitals-inc...