Screen resolution: 1024x768px | Auto width
Best viewed in Firefox, IE7 or Safari
Search

Article Archive
Business
Community
Consumerism
Doing It in France
Expat Issues
Eye on France
Features
Finance and Banking
Health, Welfare and Fitness
Language and Learning
Local Living
Motoring
Outdoors and Nature
Pets and Animals
Profiles of Residents
Property and Pools
Reading
Table Talk
Travel
Visiting the Riviera
Yachting and Boating
Bits n Pieces
Article Archive RSS
Article Archive RSS Feed
Home arrow Eye on France arrow Dutch medicine for that Social Security deficit?
Dutch medicine for that Social Security deficit? Print
Written by Riviera Reporter   

Our French friends seem to love visiting doctors and picking up pills from the pharmacy, even when there’s little need to do so. Result: that massive la Sécu deficit. The Dutch government has – to a lesser extent – the same problem and reader Wim van der Sprenkel tells us they’ve come up within an effective solution.

A Dutch person who doesn’t go into hospital or get a doctor’s prescription in a given year gets a payment of Ä255 for this restraint. This sum is reduced by the cost of any medicines received. Last year some 4 million people qualified for a payment. The system doesn’t apply to routine visits to a GP or to maternity care.

According to a health ministry spokesman, “The result has been very positive, lots of people just aren’t getting sick.” As the Dutch say in their direct way, “Geld stinkt niet.”

From Riviera Reporter Issue 126: April/May 2008

Comments (0)add
Write your comment
smaller | bigger

security image
Type the displayed characters in lower case


busy