Kurrawong_Kid
Well-Known Member
Not quite true for the IOM, In the 1970’s if you purchased a weekly mooring permit then the UK govt.made a payment and you could access medical services. Used it twice! My daughter developed chickenpox whilst on passage from Portpatrick and then I sprained my ankle in Peel and had to go to A&E in Douglas.No charges! Not sure when this facility was removed.And Mr Dowden is quite correct in that statement.
Their were other ways in which the EU offered to make interaction with the EU easier for UK citizens which the UK rejected out of hand, for instance they offered the UK the opportunity to conyinue membership of the Erasmus program which supports education in EU states other than the one of which the student is a citizen. I know many Brits who benefitted from this excellent ptogram when we were members of the EU and a few of other nationalities. The EU asked for nothing in return for this offer other than contribution at the same level as the EU countries, so its rejection offered the UK no advantage beyond satisfying the unneighbourly attitudes of the ERG.
The GHIC covers all 27 EU countries whereas the EHIC covered those 27 plus Norway, Iceland Liechtenstein and Switzerland. Non expired UK EHICs remain valid in the EU 27 but ceased to be valid in the other 4 european countries for which it used to be valid on 1 January 2021. So despite its name, it is hardly global.
Perhaps of greater concern to most British yachtsmen, neither of these schemes have ever covered the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man or Monaco but your UK NHS protection does extend to Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Isle of Wight.
Peter.