The median private healthcare spend was £500
With NHS services coming under significant pressure in recent years, a new YouGov survey reveals that one in seven Britons (15%) used private healthcare for themselves or a member of their immediate household in the last year.
The survey finds a further quarter (24%) saying they considered doing so, but decided against it on financial or other grounds. Most Britons (51%) say they didn’t consider going private in the first place.
For a third (34%) of those who used private healthcare in the last year, it was the first time they had ever done so.
A further half (49%) say that while it was not their first time using private healthcare, they would typically use the NHS. Only 11% of private healthcare users in the last year say they typically or always go private rather than using the NHS.
Why did Britons turn to private healthcare?
The main advantage of private healthcare seems to have been speed, with over half saying the top reason they went private is in order to be seen quicker (52%). A further 21% say that it was the only option available to them.
The quality of care seems to have been less of a factor, with only 15% saying the main reason was because of the better services provided through private routes.
Speed was consistently the top reason for going private regardless of how many times a respondent had used private healthcare. Those doing so for the first time were more likely to do so than others because it was because it was the only option available (27%), while those who generally or always use private healthcare over the NHS had a higher likelihood of citing the better service as the main reason (29%).
In terms of the type of healthcare people have been accessing, non-emergency appointments (such as scans, tests and operations) are by far the most common, at 50%.
Fewer private healthcare users relied on the service for a minor illness or injury (17%) or a private routine appointment (19%). One in eleven used the private service in the case of an emergency (9%).
How have Britons been paying for private healthcare?
Overall, at least 54% of those who accessed private healthcare made some form of out-of-pocket payment as part of it, including 25% who paid with disposable income, 27% using savings, 6% from borrowed money and 1% from taking out a loan (figures do not sum as some respondents will have paid through more than one method).
Three in ten (30%) paid through a workplace private healthcare scheme, and 11% did so through their own private insurance scheme.
The median private healthcare spend in the last year was £500.
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Photos: Getty