So someone rings up to a get an appointment for something that might be really serious and they won't be given an appointment until they've paid a fine for some missed appointments in the past where they might have a perfectly reasonable reason why they didn't attend.
Yup. If they have been issued reminders to pay and have not managed to find the time to pay, here is the perfect opportunity to pay and get their appointment for something that might be really serious.
Some people simply don't have the money - what are you going to do then.
And many people do have the money to pay and don't feel bad about not showing up for appointments as there are no financial penalties. Like I said, it can be like food banks where people really don't have the money to eat - if people really, really don't have £10 and they can convince the many generous good samaritans all over the place to support the NHS and pay the fine on their behalf, then they will still get the appointment about something that might be serious.
Let's face it, it's not like you currently get lightening service about potentially serious health issues now on the NHS - though it depends on the service you are trying to access and on the whole I personally have had a good experience.
We already have a Good Samaritan system to pay for other people to access medical services - it is called general taxation.
I don't think taxation has quite the deterrent effect this penalty is trying to achieve.
Frankly you are looking for a solution where there isn't a problem - I know when you look at the headline figure (about £200million) as the cost of missed appointment this sounds like a lot - but in the context of the NHS budget of about £200billion it represents about 0.1% of that budget. And fining people won't reduce that cost fully (indeed I doubt it would reduce the cost significantly) as the suggested fines are lower than the cost of an appointment and you'd have to factor in the cost of administering the fines, processes of appealing against a fine (which would probably be greater than the suggested £10 cost), plus those who appeal successfully. Finally the increased burden on other, likely more expensive, parts of the NHS as patients start heading to A&E rather than their GP.
And at around one in 20/25 appointments being missed, it is hardly the reason you can't get an appointment at your GP, is it.
Sure - if the number-crunchers do the maths and decide it is not an issue worth pursuing or this is not the solution, then fine with me.