Demand for private healthcare drove sales at Aviva as concerns about long waiting lists and staff going on strike led patients to abandon the NHS.

Private health insurance sales grew 25 per cent to £33million in the first quarter, the insurer said, after a 14 per cent jump last year.

Chief executive Amanda Blanc linked the rise in new policies directly to failings in the public health service.

She said: ‘The increase is a consequence of what we’re seeing in the NHS and customers basically saying that if they can take control over their health situation then they will. 

‘The volumes are very robust and, to be honest, we don’t see that changing.’

Healthcare boost: Insurer Aviva said private health insurance sales grew 25% to £33m in the first quarter, after a 14% jump last year

Healthcare boost: Insurer Aviva said private health insurance sales grew 25% to £33m in the first quarter, after a 14% jump last year

Healthcare boost: Insurer Aviva said private health insurance sales grew 25% to £33m in the first quarter, after a 14% jump last year

More individuals and companies are ‘attracted to the benefits of private cover’, an Aviva spokesman added.

In the past year, the NHS has been hit by staff shortages, record waiting lists and strikes by nurses, junior doctors and ambulance drivers over pay and conditions.

The FTSE 100 insurer said that customers were buying full packages, which include access to online doctors as patients become more concerned about not being able to get an appointment quickly.

The number waiting to start hospital treatment hit a record high earlier this month. NHS England figures showed that 7.3m patients had yet to start treatment at the end of March. 

In a bid to combat the ever-growing waiting list, the health service is expected to pay private companies to perform cancer checks. 

Patients will also be able to book NHS-funded procedures in private facilities under separate plans set to be confirmed today.

Overall, Aviva’s performance was mixed in the first quarter. General insurance premiums rose 11 per cent to £2.4billion but Aviva’s wealth business slowed.

Activist makes an exit 

An activist investor has dumped most of its stake in Aviva – in a boost for the insurer’s chief executive.

Hedge fund manager Cevian bought a 5 per cent stake in 2021 not long after Amanda Blanc took up her role and campaigned for a shake-up to increase investor payouts. 

But Blanc delivered, returning £4.75billion to shareholders and raising £7.5billion through the sale of eight ‘non-core’ businesses.

In February, The Mail on Sunday revealed Cevian had cut its position below 5 per cent and yesterday it was revealed that the Swedish company owns just 60,000 shares, or 0.002 per cent.

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This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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