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Public Services in France
Healthcare Services in France
 - 1. Overview
 - 2. Registration
 - 3. Couverture Maladie Universelle (CMU)
 - 4. Voluntary Health Insurance
 - 5. Health Card (Carte Vitale)
 - 6. Family Doctor (Medecin Traitent)
 - 7. Non-Reimbursable Charges
 - 8. Long term / Major Illness
 - 9. Receiving Treatment
 - 10. Dental Treatment
 - 11. Opticians & Opthalmic Treatment
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 - 13. Complaints System
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4. Voluntary 'Top Up' Health Insurance in France

  1. 4.1. Limits of Basic Health Cover
    4.2. Limits of Voluntary Insurance
    4.3. Cost of Voluntary Insurance Contributions
    4.4. Getting Voluntary Insurance


4.2. Limits of Voluntary Health Insurance in France

If you want to be fully insured, and have most of your fees and costs reimbursed, then you will need to take out voluntary health insurance cover, or ‘top-up’ health insurance as it is sometimes called.

This insurance is referred to in French as assurance complémentaire santé .

The additional cover does not allow you to jump the queue as it may do in other countries – it merely reimburses that part of the cost not paid for by the social security system.

Voluntary insurance cover will pay most, but not all of the residual costs of medical care, so you will still be left with a small amount to pay yourself. The amount will depend on your policy, your circumstances, and your treatment.

Thus, for example, voluntary insurers are specifically forbidden by the government to provide insurance cover for the €1 surcharge that now applies to all medical consultations, and there are restrictions on cover for those who do not proceed via their family doctor for medical treatment.

You will also find that most policies exclude insurance of illness or accident arising from certain 'dangerous' sports, with potential limits on alcohol or drug related illnesses or accidents. Most also limit cover for dental and opthalmic treatment.

If the doctor or consultant charges in excess of the official rates (as some are allowed to do) you will also find many policies do not pick up this extra charge, or only pick up a proportion of it, up to a maximum amount.

Apart from the issue of the level of reimbursement, you are likely to find that most contracts do not offer immediate cover. The period of delay (called a délais de carence) may be only three months, but on some contracts it is as high as a year. Other contracts provide for a reduced level of cover during the preliminary period. Accordingly, you may well find yourself paying the insurance premiums, but having no insurance cover!

All policies are not the same, so you need to read the policy to be clear about what is, and what is not, covered.

On average, individual patients are now directly responsible for about 9% of health expenditure, although, of course, nearly everyone pays into the social security system, as well as premiums to a voluntary insurer!


Next: Level of Voluntary Health Insurance Contributions

Back: Limits of Basic Health Cover



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