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American School of Paris Located to the west of Paris just beyond the Bois de Boulogne in St Cloud. The ASP is a private school offering an eduction in English from pre-school (pre-K) through to University entrance. At 41 rue Pasteur (92) St Cloud Find out more... The British Charitable Fund Helps British residents in Paris and the Ile de France who are in conditions of need, hardship or distress. Assists people of all ages and from all walks of life. Contact for information and advice. Office open 10:00 - 17:00 Monday to Thursday. Find out more... Yellow Van Shuttle Economical, simple, effective, quality service between Parisian airports and your apartment or hotel in Paris. Private transfers on request. Experienced and courteous drivers. No extra charge for luggage. Less expensive than a taxi faster than a bus. Find out more... | Paris & Ile de France Local Reference INFOrmation
Information on the French medical insurance system, the CMU and top-up insurance (or mutuel) and the purpose of a carte vitale: how, where and why to register in the system.
French health insurance (sécurité sociale) has traditionally been available to everyone resident in France: French national or foreigner, whether salaried, working as an independent artisan or professional, unemployed or retired. The system is complex with allowances varying, depending on a person's status. The information below provides an introduction and general guidelines on eligibility, including registration with CPAM and how to join the social security system, the Carte Vitale and Top-up Insurance (mutuelle). Social Security (Health Insurance)All residents in France are obliged by law to have health insurance. Most qualify for the state health insurance (sécurité sociale); in local terms, this means affiliating to the CPAM or Caisse Primaire d'Assurance Maladie.
The Basic System of Social SecurityLike other countries, France uses taxation to fund health care for residents but unlike Britain for example, France operates an insurance system. This is a mixed system with the bulk of cover coming from State assurance, and top-up cover coming from mutuelles or private health care insurance companies. All medical facilities are part of the State system but the patient is free to choose their own doctors, specialists, medical facility or hospital. What Social Security ProvidesThe Social Security decrees that on average 70 percent of the cost of medical treatment will be reimbursed but the exact figure received depends on:
It is the interaction of these two factors that determines the specific level of CPAM repayment: 1. The agreed price of the treatment is set by the Ministry of Health and known as Tarif de Convention. Repayments range from below 60 percent of this amount to full repayment of 100 percent. This is the level for:
2. The income levels of a person and their family. There are taxable income levels below which 100 percent of the Tarif de Convention is reimbursed, based on the status as a single person/couple/couple with dependants. Tariffs for these categories can be supplied by the CPAM offices.
Note: In Alsace and Moselle the percentage level of reimbursement for medical care is higher than in the rest of France. However, salary contributions are higher for the employee. Employers do not make greater contributions. Social Security for Employed PeopleNo payments are due from low-income singles, couples or families (tariffs
available from CPAM). Low-income families are entitled to a free top-up policy. Expatriates who have come to live in France need to prove their income to CPAM. This is most easily done with a French tax return. However these tax returns are submitted one year in arrears, in February each year, so those who have not declared themselves as tax residents need to show evidence of income. This can be another country's tax return, or evidence of income such as payslips, pension statements, or earnings from capital such as bank deposits, coupons from government bond holdings or share dividends. Employed personOn starting a work contract, the employer declares the new employee to URSSAF (Union de Recouvrement des Cotisations de Sécurité Sociale et d'Allocations Familiales). The employee must register with their local CPAM office. Take the following (and photocopies):
The employee and their family will be entitled to health cover for illness, pregnancy, work accidents and death. A green health card (Carte Vitale) will be supplied for each family member over 16 years. Self-employed personA self-employed person should contact the relevant local authority.
Social Security for Retired and "inactif" PeopleChanges to the law in 2007 affected "inactif" people from EU Member States who are about to become resident in France. An inactif person is one who is not engaged in economic activity on an employed or self-employed basis in France. They are classed as inactif regardless of whether they receive income from inside or outside France (from a pension, investments or other source).
Retired EU Citizens (European Conventions and Forms E121 and E106)EU expatriates resident in France qualify for retirement when they reach the retirement age as established in their home country (not at the retirement age set in France). Retired people receive benefits and pay nothing provided that they have a Form E121. This puts an expatriate in France onto exactly the same legal basis as a French national. E121 should be obtained from the former country of residence. It proves that:
In France, husbands and wives - or acknowledged partners - are treated as one taxable unit. So if there is a significant difference in age between partners, then birth and marriage certificates are
needed to bring both partners under
Social Security. Couverture Maladie Universelle (CMU)Couverture Maladie Universelle, CMU (universal illness cover) provides two slightly different state insurances:
Basic CMU is allocated for those with little or no income (there is a fixed ceiling). Basic CMU refunds care and drugs at much the same rates as other state insurance with between 35 and 65 percent refund on medication and 60 to 100 percent for medical services and operations. CMU complémentaire is complementary protection (comparable with a mutual insurance) granted based on the insured person's financial resources. It has all the advantages of a complementary protection and provides 100 percent cover and exemption from any payments. Application for CMU must be made to the local sickness insurance office (CPAM). The following must be provided:
A green health card (Carte Vitale) will be supplied for each family member over 16 years. CMU benefits for inactif EU CitizensThe European directive 2004/38 was entered into French law with the Decree 2007-371 of 21 March 2007. This specifically concerns those EU citizens resident newly moving to a member state or resident for less than five years. Any citizen of an EU member state has the right of residence provided they:
In the light of this, recent legislation has been clarified with regards to EU (including UK) nationals taking up residence in France. The points are as follows:
EU citizens gain the right of permanent residence in France after a five years of uninterrupted legal residence (and this applies to non-EU family members who have lived with them for that period. A "family member" is the spouse or partner and any dependant child under 21 years). The right of permanent residence is lost if the EU national was living away from from France for more than two successive years. EU citizens and family members with the right of residence are entitled to equal treatment with French nationals. However, until the right of permanent residence has been acquired, France is not obliged to provide social security to anyone other than employed or self-employed workers and members of their direct family. EU Citizens living in France by 23 November 2007All inactif EU citizens who were resident in France before 23 November 2007 have access to French health benefits if:
Therefore anyone who was resident in France and qualified for state health care on 23 November 2007 remains eligible; they do not need to take out private health insurance. Be aware that as these regulations are recently instated, not all health offices (CPAM) have up-to-date information. For further information contact the CPAM English-speaking helpline:
(Note: In September 2007 it was stated that inactif people who have been receiving CMU benefits had six months from 1 October 2007 to take out private health insurance, during which period they would continue to be covered by CMU. This is no longer the case; the above change was announced on 14 December. Time line on website French Health Issues) (14 December 2007 + 24 January 2008) How to Join Social SecurityVisit a local CPAM office - or arrange a meeting with a Social Security officer making a regular visit to the local Mairie - and ask for affiliation. Affiliation should then take place that day either as attestation provisiore if not all the documents are available, or as attestation d'affiliation. Claims from that day forward are covered by CPAM to the percentage appropriate
to the applicants status.
Changing address or bank
When changing address within the same département, notify the existing CPAM of the new address; it will say to which office registration should be moved. The file will be transferred and a new entitlement certificate issued. Then update the Carte Vitale at a Carte Vitale terminal. When changing address to a different département, complete and return Form S1104, the déclaration de changement de situation form available from CPAM.
Send details of the new bank and a RIB (Relevé d’Identité Bancaire) (or RIP) to CPAM, quoting social security number. Using the Carte VitaleThe 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:
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). Top-Up Insurance (Mutuelle) for Social Security CPAM repays only a percentage of medical costs and also excludes ambulance costs, the
cost of a stay in hospital, and the use of a private room. In addition modern dental and optical treatments are often very much higher than the
Tarif de Convention. Note: Not all mutuelles offer cover people to over 70 and some have an earlier cut-off date of 65. Cancelling Top-Up insuranceA contract can not be cancelled "midstream". There are therefore two cancellation options:
A policy is automatically ended by the death of the insured. Note: The Loi Chatel of August 2005 does not apply in this instance, neither does it apply on any "life" policies or professional policies. Contacts
Contacts for UK Citizens
Further Information
Updated 24/01/08 With contributions by Russell Taylor |
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