Fury over ‘tax on the sick’ as shock figures reveal hospitals have raked in more than £1BILLION in car park fees from patients, visitors and staff, over six years_Nhy
Hospitals have raked in £1.15billion in car park fees from patients, visitors and staff in the past six years, shocking figures reveal today.
In what has been branded a ‘tax on the sick’, NHS trusts have made an average of £665,000 in parking charges every day of the past year, with dozens hiking charges recently.
The vast majority of the cash has been paid out by unwell patients attending appointments and loved ones visiting them on wards, with the rest spent by doctors and nurses simply turning up to work, research shows.
It comes despite the previous Conservative government attempting to limit the amount made by hospitals by introducing free parking for disabled drivers with Blue Badges, parents of sick children staying overnight and staff doing night shifts.
Last night the Liberal Democrats, who obtained the statistics, called on Labour to go further and introduce a ‘visiting and caring fund’ so no one has to shell out to see loved ones while they are undergoing treatment.
The party’s care spokesman Alison Bennett said: ‘This is an unfair tax on the sick and on hard-working NHS staff and it has to stop. It cannot be right that nurses have to pay through the nose to get to work or that patients are subjected to sky-high fees to get treatment they desperately need.
‘The Conservatives promised to crack down on unfair hospital car parking charges but failed miserably. The new government must now work urgently to stamp out these unfair fees and back our calls for a new ‘visiting and caring fund’.’
Helen Gravestock, of Young Lives vs Cancer, said: ‘Children and young people with cancer often have to travel miles from home to get the treatment and age-appropriate care they need. This leaves families having to find an extra £250 a month on average to travel to and from hospital.
Hospitals have raked in £1.15billion in car park fees from patients, visitors and staff in the past six years. File image.