Healthcare abroad

Medical Schengen zone is go

Published on 20 January 2011

“Your neighbour goes to Slovakia for varicose vein treatment. A German and a Czech are waiting for an appointment with a Polish ophthalmologist”. Gazeta Wyborcza reports on the future area MEPs dub the “Medical Schengen Zone”, to be created within the next three years by the directive on cross-border healthcare passed by the European Parliament on January 19. Under the new regulations, patients can seek medical treatment in other EU countries or in private health care institutions at home and be partially reimbursed for the costs involved. For example, as Dziennik Gazeta Prawna explains, a Polish patient paying €2959 for a cataract surgery in the UK is reimbursed €1,415, the cost of the operation back home. According to the European Commission, cross-border healthcare represents just 1% percent of the €10 billion patients spend annually in the EU.

Interesting article?

It was made possible by Voxeurop’s community. High-quality reporting and translation comes at a cost. To continue producing independent journalism, we need your support.

Subscribe or Donate

Are you a news organisation, a business, an association or a foundation? Check out our bespoke editorial and translation services.

Support border-free European journalism

See our subscription offers, or donate to bolster our independence

On the same topic