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This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website

Healthcare in other EU countries — patients’ rights

Healthcare in other EU countries — patients’ rights

SUMMARY OF:

Directive 2011/24/EU on the application of patients’ rights in cross-border healthcare

WHAT IS THE AIM OF THE DIRECTIVE?

  • It sets out the conditions under which a patient may travel to another EU country to receive safe and high-quality medical care and have the cost reimbursed by their own health insurance scheme.
  • It also encourages cooperation between national healthcare systems.

KEY POINTS

  • The EU country providing the treatment must ensure that:
    • all the information necessary is available for patients to make an informed choice including on treatment options, availability, quality and safety of the healthcare provided, prices, authorisation or registration status;
    • transparent complaint procedures exist;
    • professional liability insurance or similar guarantees are in place;
    • privacy of personal data is respected;
    • patients have access to a written or electronic record of the treatment they receive;
    • the scale of healthcare fees charged are the same as for domestic patients who are in a comparable medical situation, or the price charged is calculated according to objective, non-discriminatory criteria if there is no comparable price for domestic patients.
  • The EU country where the patient is insured must ensure that:
    • the cost of the healthcare provided is reimbursed;
    • information on patient rights and entitlements is available;
    • patients have access to any necessary medical follow-up treatment;
    • patients have access to their medical records.
  • National contact points exist to provide information and to consult with patient organisations and healthcare providers and insurers.
  • Healthcare providers give all the necessary information to patients so they can make an informed decision, including:
    • treatment options;
    • availability;
    • quality and safety of the healthcare they provide;
    • prices;
    • authorisation or registration status.
  • A patient's own country must reimburse the cost of the treatment according to the scales it applies domestically.
  • A patient may require prior authorisation from their own country before going abroad for treatment. This may be necessary if the medical care involves at least one night in hospital and/or the use of highly specialised and cost-intensive medical equipment, or if it poses a particular risk for the patient or the population.
  • A national authority may refuse to give prior authorisation if it considers that it can provide the patient with the necessary healthcare within a medically justifiable time limit.
  • Requests for medical treatment in another EU country must be dealt with within a reasonable period of time.
  • Prescriptions issued in one EU country are valid in another.
  • National health authorities must cooperate with each other in implementing the legislation and in developing European reference networks between healthcare providers and centres of expertise.
  • The cooperation extends to tackling rare diseases, developing eHealth and assessing new health technology.
  • The legislation does not cover long-term care or the allocation of and access to organs or vaccinations.
  • The directive does not affect how EU countries organise and finance their national health systems for their own citizens.
  • The European Commission produces a report every 3 years on the way the system is working and how the directive operates. The first report was adopted in September 2015 and a subsequent one was adopted in September 2018.

The Commission has adopted a number of implementing and delegated acts related to Directive 2011/24/EU. These include:

  • Implementing Directive 2012/52/EU on the recognition of medical prescriptions issued in another EU country;
  • Implementing Decision 2013/329/EU on the establishment, management and the transparent functioning of the network of national authorities or bodies responsible for health technology assessment;
  • Delegated Decision 2014/286/EU on criteria and conditions that European reference networks and healthcare providers wishing to join a European reference network must fulfil;
  • Implementing Decision 2014/287/EU on criteria for establishing and evaluating European reference networks and their members and for facilitating the exchange of information and expertise on establishing and evaluating such networks;
  • Implementing Decision 2019/1765 on the establishment, management and the functioning of the network of national authorities responsible for e-health, which was subsequently amended by Implementing Decision (EU) 2020/1023, on the cross-border exchange of data between national contact-tracing and contact-warning mobile applications with regard to combatting the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular, amending Implementing Decision (EU) 2020/1023 adds two new annexes to Implementing Decision 2019/1765, which respectively deal with the responsibilities of:
    • the participating EU countries as joint controllers for the federation gateway for cross-border processing between national contact-tracing and contact-warning mobile applications; and
    • the Commission as data processor for the federation gateway for cross-border processing between national contact-tracing and contact-warning mobile applications.

FROM WHEN DOES THE DIRECTIVE APPLY?

It has applied since and had to become law in the EU countries by .

BACKGROUND

MAIN DOCUMENT

Directive 2011/24/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of on the application of patients’ rights in cross-border healthcare (OJ L 88, , pp. 45-65)

Successive amendments to Directive 2011/24/EU have been incorporated into the original text. See consolidated version.

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