HomePropertiesRentalsGuides to FranceRegionsServicesForumsVersion FrançaiseNews
View the IFP newsletters online here.
Log-in | Register

Log-In to Account
Username

Password


Not registered?
IFP Guides
Buying Property in France
 - House Buying Process
 - Buying Off-Plan
 - Buying at Auction
Building & Renovation
 - Building a New Home
 - Planning System
 - Financial Assistance
Finance & Taxation
 - Banking in France
 - French Mortgages
 - Personal Taxation in France
 - Inheritance Laws & Taxation
Public Services
 - Health Care Services
 - School Education
 - Higher Education
Work & Business
 - Starting a Business
 - Letting Property
Property Rights
 - Land Registration
 - Property Boundaries
 - Boundary Walls
 - Noise Nuisance
 - Rights of Way in France
Household and Motor Insurance
 - Organising Household Insurance Cover
 - Types of Insurance Cover
Contact

Contact Us
Send this to a friend
Community and News
 - IFP Forums
 - IFP Newsletter
 - Newsletter Sign-up
Services
 - Bookstore
 - Metric Unit Conversion
Finance
 - UCB Mortgages
 - Mortgage Brokers
 - Mortgages & Taxation
 - Currency Services
  

Ineffective Medicines Struck Off List

With the costs of the health service continuing to spiral, the French government has been removing from the list of prescribed medicines those they do not consider offer good value for money.

In the main, they are ‘branded’ drugs, which are considered expensive to the public purse, often of dubious medical value, and where there exists a cheaper generic alternative.


Even if the branded drug is kept on the list of prescribed medicines, the level of reimbursement to the patient from the social security system is being reduced.

Where a medicine might previously have been reimbursed at the rate of 60%, some will now only receive 35%, 15% or even 0%.

Since 2003 several hundred drugs have effectively been removed from the chemists shelves. If you now want a drug that is not on the prescribed list, then you will need to pay directly from your pocket to use it or pay for a ‘top-up’ health insurance policy that picks up the cost.

With the price of many branded drugs no longer controlled by the health system, the powerful French pharmaceutical industry has reacted by sharply pushing up the prices of some of these drugs, in the full knowledge that there are those who will continue to pay for them, whatever the cost.

The French spend more on medicines than any other country in Europe and, if the government are to get control of health service costs, then the prescription medical bill will need to continue to be high on the list of cost saving measures.




Return to Newsletter



The IFP Guides are published for general information only.
Please visit our Disclaimer for full details.

  


LinksAdvertisingHelpAbout IFPContact UsReferenceLegal

Copyright © 1995 - 2008 Internet French Property