Not really seeing the injustice as I think it is only supposed to impact the disaorganised and those who prioritise other events in their lives over NHS appointments when they should have turned up for the appointment.
Justice in Medical Ethics terms is quite specific - here is one mini-primer:
https://www.themedicportal.com/application-guide/medical-school-interview/medical-ethics/justice/Note:
"It also means that we must ensure no one is unfairly disadvantaged when it comes to access to healthcare. Justice is one reason why the NHS has certain entitlements, such as free prescriptions for lower-income individuals."So I'm a little bewildered as to how you are unable to see how your proposal (see reply 193) fails to meet the concept of justice in medical ethics. Here are just a few examples:
1. Your proposal is fundamentally regressive, in that the same about (e.g. £10) is charged regardless of the individual. £10 for some people is neither here nor there - for others it is a huge deal, hence the reason why prescriptions are free some some patients while others pay £9.35 - for some people paying £9.35 is a major issue so without free prescriptions those people are unfairly disadvantaged.
2. Your proposal will disproportionately impact those who are most vulnerable and disadvantaged. So for example patients over 90 are roughly twice as likely to miss appointments than any other age group and 220% more likely to miss appointment than the average. Similar those in the lowest socioeconomic groups are twice as likely to miss appointments. So your proposal will disadvantage people who are already likely to be vulnerable and already disadvantaged.
3. Your two-strikes-and-you-are-out proposal (i.e. fining after two missed appointments) will unfairly impact people with multiple healthcare needs and therefore have to visit the GP very often - note that 40% of all GP appointments are taken by just 10% of the population. So a person who has 20 GP appointment in a year and misses two (so a 10% non attendance rate) would be hit by your proposal yet a person who has just two appointments, and misses one of those (a 50% non attendance rate) won't be. The more appointments you have the more likely you are to be impacted - so people with multiple, complex health care needs would be unfairly disadvantaged.
4. Having a system which requires people to pay a fine first (in order to be able to access further healthcare) but with an appeals process will disadvantage those who will find appealing difficult, for example people with significant learning difficulties or other challenges to engaging with an appeals process, e.g. mental health issues that means that such a process creates significant anxiety issues. They would either be left out of pocket (although they might have perfectly legitimate reasons for missing an appointment) or would be denied ongoing healthcare. Again that doesn't fit with the principle of justice.
I could go on, but I won't. Hopefully you can see how your proposal isn't really compatible with the principle of justice in medical ethics.