Hong Kong public hospitals urged to retain refund scheme for ‘non-urgent’ patients who drop out of A&E queue
- Temporary measure introduced over Lunar New Year holiday helped ease load on emergency departments
- Do more to encourage people to seek treatment elsewhere, concern groups say

Concern groups and doctors want Hong Kong public hospitals to retain a temporary arrangement allowing non-urgent patients at accident and emergency (A&E) departments to receive a refund if they give up waiting to see a medical professional and leave.
The measure to return the attendance fee to those who choose to leave was put in place from February 9 to 18, the Lunar New Year holiday season, when public hospitals usually witness a surge in patient numbers.
The calls to extend the refund measure came as Covid-19 and flu cases rose in the city.
The Hospital Authority said last week that 1,032 people who went to A&E departments over that period gave up waiting and asked for refunds. They made up almost 2 per cent of all A&E patients and most were in a stable condition when they chose to leave.

As a result, overall pressure on public hospitals was eased and the waiting times were reduced for those being admitted to wards through the emergency departments, the authority said.