Like I've said before, this is annoying in principle but given the amount of healthcare we've needed I don't feel I can complain too much.
Well you know it is true that £200 or whatever it is is not crazily onerous. I mean, that's just a couple of trips to the GP. If you fall off the bus and break your arm and need pins and screws, that's a bargain right there. When they cart you into the A&E you can wave the broken arm at them and say, "Gotcha!"
To me though, it's just a political move as it actually ends up costing more to administer than they bring in, and thus it is just sort of a crappy thing to do.
Regarding the
National service v. the
International service....the word "national" was chosen not at all to make a statement about exclusion of non citizens...and this is on record in the original NHS White Paper....the word "national" was used as the system before, if you can call it a system, was a regional/local patchwork of different cobbled together systems and services. A "national" service simply meant a service that was administered by the national government and not at local level.
This whole, "Oh it is a
National service, not an
International service," is just a catchy phrase cooked up by some politico, with absolutely no connection to original intent. It was stated plainly, too, by the founders of the NHS that it would be available to visiting non citizens. Tuberculosis then (Ebola or bird flu today) recognised no passport colour or immigration status.