Social Security in France: Terminology
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This page provides a very useful alphabetical guide explaining terminology used in the French Social Security health insurance system. Find out what is meant by Forfait journalier, Frais de soins or Mutuelle.
Here is a some terminology (listed alphabetically) often found when dealing
with French health services and medical insurance:
Affections de longue durée - Long term illnesses
Severe or chronic illnesses for which Social Security covers 100 percent of medical
expenses.
Assurance maladie - Health Insurance
Health Insurance is one of the four branches constituting the Social
Security System which provides universal, compulsory and
interdependent Health Insurance. Irrespective of age and
state of health, each beneficiary receives protection against the risk
and consequences of disease, for which they contribute according to their means.
Ayant-droit - Dependent
A person who is eligible to the refund of medical expenses on the same basis
as the insured (dependents include spouse, unmarried partner, PACS partner,
child or any other dependent person who has been living with the insured for at
least one year).
Carte Vitale - National Health Insurance Card
The Carte Vitale (green card) is the national insurance card issued to
anyone eligible aged 16 and over. It gives evidence of membership and rights to
French health insurance - an affiliation to CPAM. It is issued on application to
CPAM.
It contains all the administrative information necessary for the refund of
care:
- Social security number
- Details of health insurance scheme and top-up insurance
- Details of the relevant health insurance office
- Full name and date of birth of the card holder and their dependants
- Details of any exemption or reduction that apples to payments or
entitlement to supplementary universal cover
The Carte Vitale does not carry personal medical information.
The Carte Vitale should be handed over at every health appointment (doctor,
clinic, hospital, pharmacy) that is equipped with a computer able to read it.
The patient will generally receive reimbursement for treatment or medicines
directly into their bank account within five days. Reimbursement is made
according to income level and the Tarif de Convention (or "approved
treatment cost") currently in force.
A person with a Carte Blanche or top-up insurance card (private
complimentary insurance) will have the treatment recorded and appropriate
balance reimbursed by their mutuelle.
A Carte Vitale has no expiry date but must be updated annually inserting it
in the green box at town halls and some hospitals and pharmacies.
A person without a Carte Vitale eligible for state health insurance will
receive a feuille de soins (a brown receipt form) from the doctor,
pharmacist or hospital staff. This is recognised by CPAM as a legitimate medical
payment. It should be posted to CPAM for reimbursement.
The "nouvelle Carte Vitale" is an new, upgraded version that is
being issued to card holders across France. A form will be sent, to which a
recent identity (ID) photograph must be added, the form signed and returned in
the envelope provided, along with a copy of ID (resident's card or passport).
CMU (Couverture Maladie Universelle) - Universal Health Coverage
Universal Health Coverage (CMU) is to help those in financial difficulty have
access to medical treatment. The aim is to allow people who were unable to get
treatment because they do not have insurance, or for financial reasons, to
receive necessary treatment without having
to pay anything in advance.
Basic CMU is affiliation to the French Social Security System providing health
expenses cover for anyone living regularly or on a permanent basis in France.
Complementary CMU includes the possibility of top-up insurance. Anyone with low
income living permanently in France can (under certain conditions) benefit from
top-up insurance.
Degré d'invalidité - Grade of incapacity
Loss of physical capacity of an individual, assessed as a percentage of
normal capacity.
Dépassement d'honoraires - Overstepping of fees
A doctor's fee depends on their position regarding the Agreement which binds
doctors with Social Security. Fees are set to a fixed rate, the tarif de convention.
- Doctors who choose to adhere to the Agreement are "government-regulated"
(conventioné) and the fees charged are inline with fixed rates
- Doctors who choose not to adhere are
"non-government-regulated" (non-conventioné). In this
case, they may fix their fees freely while Social Security only refunds the
patient in line with the government-set tariff
Forfait journalier - Daily hospital fee
The minimum amount that any inpatient has to pay for any hospital stay
exceeding 24 hours. (It covers accommodation expenses).
Foyer - Household
The "household" includes the applicant and dependents: husband and
wife, or cohabitant, or partner bound by a PACS, children, parents and the other persons in charge.
Frais de soins - Health expenses
Expenses incurred to receive health care (medicine, doctor's visits, hospital
stay, laboratory tests, etc.)
Incapacité permanente - Permanent incapacity
Permanent loss of the ability to work resulting from an occupational injury (or
travel accident) or disease. Such loss can be either total or partial.
Indemnités journalières - Daily allowances
Benefits paid to offset wage loss during a sickness leave, a maternity leave, a
paternity leave or an occupational injury leave.
Médecin traitant - Primary care physician
The primary care physician is the medical practitioner who knows the patient
best and maintains records of health problems, past
and present, way of life and habits. Having a primary care physician helps to
avoid repeating tests; it also helps to stop the multiplication of
prescriptions.
The primary care physician's role is to coordinate the different
consultations and tests necessary for the health of the patient (parcours de
soins). The primary care physician can be a General Practitioner or specialist.
For any medical matter a patient should first visit their primary care physician
who will refer the patient to the necessary health professional.
Médicament générique - Generic drug
Generic drugs are copies of other medicines. They are made of the same principle
ingredients as the brand-name medicines, have the same effect and are as
reliable. They are generally between 20 and 30 times cheaper than the brand originals.
Mutuelle - Mutual insurance company
A mutuelle is an "association" which provides top-up or complimentary
health insurance to its members in exchange for payment. The top-up insurance
allows for better reimbursement for health expenses by complementing the
percentage reimbursed by the Social Security.
Parcours de soins coordonnés - Coordination of care
Coordination of care is determined by the primary care physician who
coordinates the involvement of other doctors, and by the personal medical file
which records the main information necessary about the patient.
Medical
monitoring coordinated by a doctor who knows the patient well means that the
patient can be better and more suitably treated. This also helps to avoid
consultations and tests that can be costly both for the patient and the French
National Health Service.
Régime d'assurance maladie - Health Insurance
There are several types of health insurance:
- general regime (often called simply "Assurance maladie"), which
covers most people under the system (the employed and retired people from the
private sector)
- specific regimes which cover certain professions such as farming and artisans
- special regimes (about 100), which cover civil servants, mainly, and other
workers from the public sector (SNCF, EDF-GDF) and ministers of religion.
An obligatory regime is a health insurance to which a person is automatically
adhered to because of their personal situation. Top-up insurance can be added to
the basic cover provided by the social security.
Rente - Occupational injury pension
Regular payment paid in compensation for a permanent incapacity.
Sécurité sociale - Social Security
Created in 1945 and founded on the principle of national solidarity, the Social
Security system is made up of four branches:
- health
- old-age
- family
- dependence
It guarantees workers against any kind of risk that could mean a reduction in
income: illness, maternity, invalidity, accidents at work and professional
illnesses, old age, death, death of a partner and family. This guarantee works by the insured and their dependents
being affiliated to one (or
several) obligatory regime.
The Social Security is made up of several dozen regimes, the most important one
being the general workers' (non-agricultural) regime from which two thirds of
its payments are made.
Ticket modérateur - Top-up
The top-up represents the part of the charges not covered by health insurance and which is paid either by the patient or by the additional medical
cover.
Tiers-payant - Third-party payment
This is when the top-up insurance automatically pays all or part of the sum
spent on health care. It applies generally to payment for prescription medicines
prescribed by a doctor. The insured presents the top-up insurance card (white)
and the carte vitale (green) to the pharmacist and makes no cash payment. The
pharmacist is reimbursed directly by the top-up insurance and the social
security. Third-party payment can include other services, particularly
hospitalisation costs, once agreed to by the insurance company.
Further Information
Information provided by the Polyclinique Francheville, 34 Boulevard de Vésone,
24004 Perigeaux
Tel: 05 53 02 11 11
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