French health minister proposes lower reimbursement of medicine
French health minister proposes lower reimbursement of medicine"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
PATIENTS (OR THEIR TOP-UP INSURANCE) WILL NEED TO PAY MORE IF THE PROPOSAL GOES AHEAD The French government has proposed plans to reduce state reimbursement of medication and medical
consultations by 5%, with the shortfall made up by patients or their private insurance policies. Health Minister Geneviève Darrieussecq put forward the idea as the Senate began discussions
on the 2025 Budget on Monday, November 18. If it goes ahead, the change would come into force next year (2025). Ms Darrieussecq said: “The co-payment (ticket modérateur) on drugs [i.e. the
amount left to be paid by patients after reimbursement by the Assurance-maladie] will increase by 5%.” This ‘co-payment’ is usually paid for by the patient or by their top-up /mutuelle
private health insurance if they have one. The minister also proposed plans to increase the co-payment for medical consultations by 10%. The government initially proposed plans to reduce the
reimbursement rate for consultations from 70% to 60%. In future they will lIkely be reimbursed at 65%. It also wants to reduce the three existing reimbursement rates for medicines (65%,
30% and 15%) by the same proportion. If the changes go ahead, it will be by ministerial decree. IMPACT ON TOP-UP INSURANCE Yet, former Health Minister Frédéric Valletoux has warned of the
potential impact of the measures on the cost of mutuelles and top-up health insurance, as the extra costs will simply be transferred over to these policies, said Ms Darrieussecq. Read also:
The proposals come amid many government suggestions for ways to shave billions off the country’s deficit, and dramatically reduce costs. The Senate is continuing its debates on the
Budget, which is set to be voted on by the Assemblée Nationale today (November 19) and is yet to be approved by the higher chamber. The budget could also be forced through by the government
using a mechanism known as 49.3. Read also: France’s 2025 budget will ‘probably’ be forced through without vote, says PM
Trending News
Kqed newsroom | e-cigarettes, hydrogen cars, artist wendy macnaughtonSpecial | 27m 53sVideo has Closed Captions | CC The Debate Over E-cigarettes, The Highway to Hydrogen, Artist Wendy MacN...
Pet care to be part of France’s school curriculum from September 2024Pet care and respect are to be taught to pupils in French primary schools from this September, as part of their ‘moral a...
Hedgehog inhibitor gets landmark skin cancer approval, but questions remain for wider potentialApproval for Genentech's vismodegib marked the first approval for a Hedgehog inhibitor, but questions remain for th...
Thermal profiling reveals phenylalanine hydroxylase as an off-target of panobinostatABSTRACT We describe a two-dimensional thermal proteome profiling strategy that can be combined with an orthogonal chemo...
Books Received | NatureAccess through your institution Buy or subscribe This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution ...
Latests News
French health minister proposes lower reimbursement of medicinePATIENTS (OR THEIR TOP-UP INSURANCE) WILL NEED TO PAY MORE IF THE PROPOSAL GOES AHEAD The French government has proposed...
Policy shift lets students withhold low sat scoresStudents who take the SAT more than once will soon be able to cherry-pick which scores they want colleges to see, rather...
Coronavirus is making it even harder for the census to count every u. S. ResidentUPDATED MARCH 15 AT 6:47 P.M. ET Already saddled with cybersecurity risks, hiring challenges and wavering public trust, ...
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | Carnegie Endowment for International PeaceGlobal LocationsresearchemissaryaboutexpertsmoresupportprogramseventsblogspodcastsvideosNewslettersAnnual Reportscareers...
Will covid-19 kickstart inflation? | thearticleLast August, in The Spectre of Inflation, I argued that the remarkable stability of prices in the past 25 years was due ...