The Yvonne Watts Case: The EU and Health Care
Press Release from www.brugesgroup.com
For Immediate Release
EU encroaches on the
NHS
THE YVONNE WATTS CASE
The EU and Health Care
The Advocate General on Thursday, 15th
December, gave his long awaited ruling on the case of Yvonne Watts who,
because of the long NHS waiting lists had to go abroad to recieve treatment.
This decision is set to be ratified by the European Court of Justice in the
spring. Combined with provisions in the EU treaties this decision covers much
more than allowing one person to have the costs of a hip operation reimbursed.
It paves the way for the EU to extend its powers into the area of health
care.
The UK is increasingly in the position where we cannot take action to improve
health care without first tackling the ‘European’ question. The NHS is set to
suffer as a result of the EU's extension of the Working Time Directive and the
Charter of Fundamental Rights, which is coming into force, will add new
burdens. Furthermore, it has not been realised, until now, that the European
Union plans to establish this key public service as an area which national
governments will no longer be able to control for themselves: a bombshell that
politicians from all parties are yet to discover.
The NHS needs reform. But it needs a solid structural overhaul and not policy
change by legal subterfuge. If some European states have a better Health
service, it is not because of diktats from above: it is because of real
diversity and the lessons of best practice learnt on the ground. The last
thing the NHS needs is to see these alternative models homogenised in the name
of standardisation - the socialist leg-irons of reform.
The Bruges Group originally exposed how the future of the NHS will be directed
at an EU level. Through successive treaties and recent legal cases health
provision is set to be run by the same organisation that brought us the CAP
and the CFP.
Click
here to read the Bruges Group's research on how heath care is steadily coming
under the contro of the EU

Robert Oulds, Director of the Bruges Group says,
"After heavy criticism from Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, David Cameron has
ruled out the introduction of 'Patient Passports' where the Government would
pay half the costs of private treatment allowing those on long waiting lists
to opt out of the NHS. Little do they realise that when the Advocate General's
decision is upheld by the European Court of Justice the whole costs of
treatment outside of the NHS will have to be met by the Government.
"Our politicians need to realise that they do not govern Britain and are
incapable of reforming the NHS until they first tackle the European
question.
"This decision goes some way to rubbishing the policies of all three main
political parties".
Dr Lee Rotherham , author of the Bruges Group paper
Health and the Nation says,
"This is another area where Gordon Brown has failed to budget for extra
burdens put on the taxpayer as a result of decisions taken in Luxembourg.
"When the Advocate General's decision is upheld in the spring, many people
will leave these shores to seek medical treatment on the continent. This will
then be re-imbursed by the Government taking money and resouces out of the
NHS. It destroys New Labour's waiting list system."
-
ENDS -
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Notes for
Editors
Click here
to obtain full details of the Advocate General's
decision
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For
further information contact:
Robert Oulds
Director
The Bruges Group
216 Linen Hall, 162-168 Regent Street, London W1B 5TB
UK
Tel: +44(0) 20 7287 4414
Fax: +44(0) 20 7287 5522
Mobile: 0774 002 9787
E-mail: info@brugesgroup.com
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