Campaigners blocked the entrance of the Department of Health this morning as part of ongoing protests against new NHS charging rules for migrants.
From today, anyone not entitled to free NHS care will be expected to pay up-front for treatment being accessed either in hospital or in the community.
Healthcare professionals and activists set up an 'immigration checkpoint' outside the government building to highlight the policy, which they say turns doctors into border guards.
We're joining @DocsNotCops for a day of action to resist racism in the #NHS. #patientsnotpassports pic.twitter.com/u5T4ar5126
Featured BASC given permission to bring judicial review of Defra decisionFeatured Concern over doctors’ health needs as legislation to regulate PAs and AAs introduced— Global Justice Now (@GlobalJusticeUK) October 23, 2017
The protest comes as a survey from the medical charity Medact Manchester found that NHS professionals have a poor understanding of the new rules. Of 198 healthcare workers asked, eight in ten could not confidently define the difference between refugees, asylum seekers and failed asylum seekers.
A cardiology trainee and member of the organisation Docs Not Cops, which staged today's protest, said:
"This culture of fear will destroy the compassionate and trusting relationship NHS workers have with patients. Silence is complicity, and as healthcare workers we cannot afford to stand by while our patients are hurting."
Another member of the group, who is also a midwife, said:
"The introduction of immigration checks has made racial profiling an NHS policy and already we are seeing an alarming number of people singled out and threatened by the institutions that are supposed to be caring for them."
Other actions will take place throughout the day including calls to the Department of Health complaints line and a social media campaign using the hashtag #PatientsNotPassports.