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As I described before: EHIC is not CSI. The EHIC card is just a document that "proves" that you actually had insurance in your home country. Since you had EHIC, it means that an you had insurance with a medical provider.almighty_horse wrote:Hi,
Thanks for your response. However, I did not have any other CSI beyond EHIC, I was not insured privately and the EHIC is the only form of CSI I held.
I think the current document you have should be enough of a proof (then again, I'm just a person on the internet and not an immigration lawyer or Home Office clerk!).almighty_horse wrote:John,
I think you're onto something here and I'm getting a lightbulb moment. Let's clarify.
Throughout my education period my mum's employer in Poland paid monthly contributions (deducted from her monthly salary) to what is known as Social Insurance Institution (Polish abbreviation ZUS), a Polish state organization responsible for social insurance matters. I have a document certifying that my mum paid the contributions that covered her and me and the document states that as a result both me and my mum had rights to healthcare, use of state medical facilities etc. in Poland. It doesn't mention "comprehensive sickness insurance" though.
However, to the best of my knowledge, they are not the "insurer", because the insurer will be what is known as the National Health Fund. ZUS only collects contributions that are then distributed to the National Health Fund (and other bodies, e.g. pension funds), which finances healthcare, as well as helps reduce medicine prices (just like NHS does with antibiotics, for example).
The Polish EHIC card was issued by the Fund, not the ZUS.
I am happy to translate and send that certificate to the Home Office, but wonder if they will accept "a confirmation that contributions were paid to ZUS and as a result the individual was insured" rather than "a confirmation that the individual was insured by the Fund".
The EHIC card was indeed designed to be used in trips to another EU state. It makes you eligible to the basic health service within EU, allowing the state to easily charge your home state for services provided.Wanderer wrote:I'm a UK citizen working and living in Denmark, and I was told the EHIC is really just for (intra-EU) visitors, for residence you need to enrol into the local social system, in my case via a Danish CPR card which allocates me a doctor etc and fully covers me for the Danish Health Care System.
I'm in nearly exactly the same situation as you are/were. I came to UK to study from 2011 till 2016, now I'm working. I had EHIC for 4,5 years only and whenever I applied for a new one, they would ask me to return the old one so now I don't have these cards anymore. However, I was and still am under ZUS insurance. Please tell me if you were able to obtain PR using ZUS?almighty_horse wrote:Hi,
I am an EU national applying for Permanent Residency in the UK based on a 5-year qualification period. I arrived as a student in September 2011 and had a home country (Poland) issued EHIC card for either 6 or 12 months (can’t remember). I need to prove I held Comprehensive Sickness Insurance throughout the qualifying 5-year period, but unfortunately threw the card away - it expired in 2012 and I did not expect I would need to use it in the future.
I never renewed the card, but I also commenced work on 27/02/2012 - initially it was to support my studies, but by June 2012 I was spending significantly more time working than studying, and work became my main activity, so I hope I will be able to demonstrate I did not need EHIC afterwards?
What can I do?
I have contacted the EHIC issuer in Poland, but they cannot certify I held the card, unless the request comes from the Public Institution that requires it. They quote EU law (Article 6 of Regulation EC 883/2004 and Article 12 of Regulation EC 987/2009) forbidding them from issuing that confirmation to an individual (or my employer, I tried), saying that if the Home Office requires it, they should request it themselves. Only then, the issuer will issue form E104 directly to them.
Your ideas will be much appreciated - thanks a lot for your help!