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    Home»Health

    European Health Insurance Card – guide

    eub2By eub216 July 2008 Health No Comments4 Mins Read
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    — last modified 16 July 2008

    Four years after its launch, 173 million people have a European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) in their pocket. Citizens from 31 European countries can use the card to get the medical care they need if they fall ill or have an accident in one of the participating countries (the EU, Norway, Liechtenstein Iceland and Switzerland). The EHIC simplifies procedures and cuts red tape for citizens when disaster strikes during a temporary stay abroad.


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    The European Health Insurance Card covers all health care which is needed during a temporary stay in one of the 31 participating countries other than the country of residence, be it for travel, for work or for studies. The card entitles you, in case of illness or accident, to the same medical treatment and on the same basis as local patients, as if you were insured in the state of stay.

    As each EU Member State has its own rules for public medical provision, the EHIC covers free medical treatment in some Member States, whilst in other Member States it covers reduced cost medical treatment. Some Member States may provide care free at the point of use (such as Spain or the United Kingdom), while others may require payment, to be claimed back later (such as Belgium or France).

    The EHIC can only be used in the framework of public health care provision. Private health care providers (hospitals, doctors, pharmacists, dentists, etc.) can therefore refuse the EHIC.

    The EHIC is valid in 31 European countries. These include the 27 European Union countries (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom) as well as Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

    Each Member State is responsible for the distribution of the EHIC on its territory. Therefore each Member State has its own distribution procedures. In some cases the card can be ordered online. People should contact their local sickness insurance institution or equivalent for further information.

    All European citizens who are covered by a public sickness insurance scheme of one of the EEA States or of Switzerland, is entitled to an EHIC.

    Nationals of third countries who are legally residing in one of the EU Member States (except Denmark) are also entitled. However, they cannot use their card in Denmark, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.

    Almost 173 million people in Europe now have an EHIC. This is around 36% of the total EU population.

    However, there are significant differences between Member States. In Italy, Austria and Liechtenstein almost the whole population has an EHIC, while in Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, Poland, Spain, Cyprus less than 5% of the population has one.

    BE
    1 907 993
    18
    BG
    104 871
    1
    CZ
    8 400 000
    82
    DK
    849 903
    16
    DE
    45 000 000
    55
    EE
    99 590
    8
    GR
    104 326
    1
    ES
    1 729 962
    4
    FR
    4 631 709
    8
    IE
    1 066 476
    25
    IT
    56 981 277
    97
    CY
    32 077
    4
    LV
    32 884
    1
    LT
    142 002
    4
    LU
    401 421
    80
    HU
    431 089
    4
    MT
    120 781
    30
    NL
    768 878
    5
    AT
    7 967 193
    96
    PL
    555 761
    1
    PT
    667 827
    6
    RO
    55 000
    0
    SI
    251 084
    13
    SK
    799 575
    15
    SE
    2 900 000
    32
    FI
    361 378
    7
    UK
    27 500 000
    46
    CH
    7 000 000
    96
    IS
    78 770
    39
    LI
    35 317
    99
    NO
    2 021 197
    46

    This difference can be partly explained by the fact that in some countries, such as Italy and Austria, the EHIC has been integrated on the reverse side of the national sickness insurance card. In general, the EHIC is more widely known in those countries which have been members of the European Union longer and less well known in the newer member states.

    In addition, some national authorities have run specific information campaigns to raise awareness of the card in their countries. The European Commission works with Member States to support these activities and will from Autumn 2008 step up its activities to raise awareness of the card both among health care providers and the general public.

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