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British Doctor Says Colleagues Told Him They Would Refuse Emergency Care to Israelis

Officials called the allegations shocking, urging a review of regulatory protections for Jewish patients and NHS staff.

Overview

  • An ITV interview featured a Jewish doctor who said he had been told by other physicians that they would refuse to treat patients from Israel, including in life‑threatening emergency settings.
  • The Department of Health described the claims as "shocking" and said it is unacceptable for people to feel unsafe using or working in the NHS, noting concerns about whether current regulatory systems adequately protect Jewish patients and staff.
  • Reporting to date relies primarily on the first‑person account aired by ITV and published summaries, and the articles do not provide independent corroboration of the alleged refusals or name the clinicians involved.
  • The doctor also recounted experiencing verbal abuse in public while wearing a kippah and said the wider rise in antisemitic incidents in Britain has affected his family’s plans, underscoring the personal toll on British Jews and NHS employees.
  • The claims have prompted calls for scrutiny of how the health system records, investigates and disciplines racist conduct, and readers should watch for any formal inquiries or regulatory action that would verify the allegations.