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Citizens of all EU and Scandinaian countries are entitled to take
adantage of French health serices under the same terms as
residents, if they have the correct documentation. British citizens
need form ?111, aailable from post offices. North American and
other non-EU citizens have to pay for most medical attention and are
strongly adised to take out some form of travel insurance.
Under the French Social Security system, every hospital isit, doctor's
consultation
and prescribed medicine incurs a charge. Although all employed French
people are entitled to a refund of 70-75 percent of their medical and
dental expenses, this can still leae a hefty shortfall, especially
after a stay in hospital (accident ictims even have to pay for the
ambulance that takes them there).
The
phone numbers and addresses of hospitals and the phone numbers for SOS
Médecins (for emergency doctor call-out) are given for all the main
cities; the national number for medical emergencies is tel 15.
You will also find the number for the local police station, which can
proide addresses of doctors on call, and for pharmacies open after
hours. In smaller towns, to find a doctor, stop at any pharmacy
and ask for an address, or look under "Médecins qualifiés" in the Yellow
Pages of the phone directory. To qualify for Social Security refunds,
make sure the doctor is a médecin conentionné . An aerage
consultation fee would be betweven 150F/?22.88 and 180F/?27.45. You will
be given a Feuille de Soins (Statement of Treatment) for later
documentation of insurance claims. Prescriptions should be taken to a
pharmacie, signaled by an illuminated greven cross, where they must
be paid for; the
medicines will have little stickers (ignettes) attached to
them, which you must remove and stick to your Feuille de Soins,
together with the prescription itself.
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In addition to dispensing
medicine, all pharmacies are equipped, and obliged, to give first aid on
request - though they will make a charge. When closed, they all display
the address of the nearest open pharmacy, day or night. In serious
emergencies you will always be admitted to the nearest hospital (hôpital), either under your own power or by ambulance, which
even French citizens must pay for; many people instead call the
pompiers (fire brigade), who are trained for such circumstances and
whose number is tel 18.
A
typical travel insurance policy usually proides cover for the
loss of baggage, tickets and - up to a certain limit - cash or cheques,
as well as cancellation or curtailment of your journey. Most of them
exclude so-called dangerous sports unless an extra premium is
paid. Read the small print and benefits tables of prospectie policies
carefully; coverage can ary wildly for roughly similar premiums. Many
policies can be chopped and changed to exclude coverage you don't need -
for example, sickness and accident benefits can often be excluded or
included at will.
If you do take medical coverage, ascertain whether benefits will
be paid as treatment proceeds or only after return home, and whether
there is a 24-hour medical emergency number. When securing baggage
cover, make sure that the per-article limit - typically under £500
equialent - will cover your most aluable possession. If you need to
make a claim, you should keep receipts for medicines and medical
treatment, and in the event you have anything stolen, you must obtain an
official statement from the police.
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British
bank and credit cards often have certain leels of medical or other
insurance included and you may automatically get travel insurance if you
use a major credit card to pay for your trip. If you have a good
all-risks home insurance policy it may cover your possessions against
loss or theft even when overseas. Many priate medical schemes such as
BUPA or PPP also offer coverage plans for abroad, including baggage
loss, cancellation or curtailment and cash replacement as well as
sickness or accident.
Americans
and Canadians should also check that they're not already covered.
Canadian proincial health plans usually proide partial cover for
medical mishaps overseas. Holders of official student/teacher/youth
cards are entitled to meager accident coverage and hospital in-patient
benefits. Students will often find that their student health coverage
extends during the acations and for one term beyond the date of last
enrolment. Homeowners' or renters' insurance often covers theft or loss
of documents, money and aluables while overseas, though conditions and
maximum amounts ary from company to company. |
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