NHS hospitals in England will be free to use almost half their hospital beds and theatre time for private patients under government plans. A recent revision to the ongoing health bill will allow foundation hospitals to raise 49% of funds through non-NHS work if the bill gets through Parliament. Most foundation trusts are now limited to a private income of about 2%. The Health Secretary says the move will benefit NHS patients but Labour claimed it could lead to longer waiting lists. The amendment to a clause of the Health and Social Care Bill was made shortly before Christmas by Health Minister Earl Howe. Commenting on the move, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said lifting the private income cap for foundation hospitals would directly benefit NHS patients. If these hospitals earn additional income from private work that means there will be more money available to invest in NHS services," he said in a statement. "Furthermore services for NHS patients will be safeguarded because foundation hospitals' core legal duty will be to care for them." But Labour's shadow Health Secretary Andy Burnham claimed the move could mean longer waits for NHS patients. He said: "This surprise move, sneaked out just before Christmas, is the clearest sign yet of David Cameron's determination to turn our precious NHS into a US-style commercial system, where hospitals are more interested in profits than people. "With NHS hospitals able to devote half of their beds to private patients, people will begin to see how our hospitals will never be the same again if Cameron's Health Bill gets through Parliament." Controversy A cap on the amount of income hospitals can raise from private patients was put in place by Labour in 2003, amid political controversy over the setting up of foundation hospitals, which have more freedom to decide how their services are run. All NHS hospitals are set to become foundation hospitals by 2014. The cap has prevented hospitals from expanding their private work beyond the proportion earned in 2002. It varies from hospital to hospital, but is limited to about 2% in most hospitals. In a small number of specialist hospitals, such as the Royal Marsden, it is set much higher, at around 30%. Health secretary Andrew Lansley has long said he will abolish the cap but it has been unclear how much private work was envisioned. Ministers have pointed out that the Royal Marsden is rated one of the best NHS providers while taking up to around a third of its income from private activity. But critics of the move are concerned that NHS patients will get a poor deal as foundation trusts with large financial deficits take on more private work.
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