[F1Patients who should not be tested for, or vaccinated against, coronavirus: confirmation of exemptionE+W
22A.—(1) Subject to paragraph (6), a contract must contain a term which requires the contractor to respond to a valid exemption confirmation request [F2if it is made at a relevant time].
(2) An exemption confirmation request—
(a)is a request to confirm whether a relevant patient (“P”), for clinical reasons—
(i)should neither be tested for coronavirus nor vaccinated with an authorised vaccine, or
(ii)should not be vaccinated with an authorised vaccine, and
(b)is valid if it is made in accordance with the process approved by the Secretary of State F3.
[F4(2A) A valid exemption confirmation request is made at a relevant time if, at the time the request is made to the contractor—
(a)legislation in force in England requires a person or class of person to be vaccinated against coronavirus unless they can show that, for clinical reasons, they are exempt from vaccination with an authorised vaccine, or
(b)guidance issued by, or on behalf of, the Secretary of State provides that a person or class of person should be vaccinated against coronavirus unless they can show that, for clinical reasons, they are exempt from vaccination with an authorised vaccine.]
(3) An exemption confirmation request may be made by—
(a)P, or
(b)where P is a person to whom paragraph (4) applies, an appropriate person acting on behalf of P.
(4) This paragraph applies to a person if they—
(a)are a child, or
(b)lack the capacity to make a request under paragraph (1).
(5) The contractor must respond to a valid exemption confirmation request [F5made at a relevant time]—
(a)free of charge to P or the appropriate person, and
(b)by recording its response on an information hub using a method approved by the Secretary of State.
(6) A contractor is not required to respond to a valid exemption confirmation request if—
(a)for the medical condition which may mean that P should neither be tested for coronavirus nor vaccinated with an authorised vaccine, or should not be vaccinated with an authorised vaccine, P is being attended by a medical practitioner who is not—
(i)engaged or employed by the contractor,
(ii)in the case of a contract with two or more persons practising in partnership, one of those persons, or
(iii)in the case of a contract with a company limited by shares, one of the persons legally or beneficially owning shares in that company, and
(b)that medical condition is not one to which paragraph (7) applies.
(7) This paragraph applies to a medical condition if no person with that condition should be—
(a)tested for coronavirus or vaccinated with an authorised vaccine, or
(b)vaccinated with an authorised vaccine.
(8) In this regulation—
“authorised vaccine” means a medicinal product—
authorised for supply in the United Kingdom in accordance with a marketing authorisation, or
authorised by the licensing authority on a temporary basis under regulation 174 of the Human Medicines Regulations 2012 (supply in response to spread of pathogenic agents etc),
for vaccination against coronavirus;
“coronavirus” means severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2);
“licensing authority”, “marketing authorisation” and “medicinal product” have the meanings given in the Human Medicines Regulations 2012 (see regulations 6, 8 and 2, respectively, of those Regulations);
“relevant patient” means—
a registered patient, or
a temporary resident.]
Textual Amendments
F1Reg. 22A inserted (1.10.2021) by The National Health Service (General Medical Services Contracts and Personal Medical Services Agreements) (Amendment) (No. 2) Regulations 2021 (S.I. 2021/995), reg. 1(2), Sch. 1 para. 13 (with reg. 3)
F2Words in reg. 22A(1) inserted (11.7.2022) by The National Health Service (General Medical Services Contracts and Personal Medical Services Agreements) (Amendment) (No. 2) Regulations 2022 (S.I. 2022/687), regs. 1(2), 2(2)(a)
F3Full details of the process will be made available on www.gov.uk before 1st October 2021.