End of reimbursement for sector 3 doctors' prescriptions in 2027

From January 1, 2027, prescriptions for care and medications by sector 3 liberal doctors will no longer be reimbursed by Assurance-maladie, under the 2026 social security financing law. The measure affects about 1,000 non-conventioned doctors out of more than 200,000 in practice. The profession is voicing anger over this restriction.

The 2026 social security financing law stipulates that, from January 1, 2027, Assurance-maladie will stop reimbursing medications and procedures prescribed by sector 3 doctors. These practitioners, not conventioned with the Caisse nationale d'assurance-maladie (Cnam), number about 1,000 out of more than 200,000 liberal doctors in regular practice. They set their fees freely without administrative constraints.

Currently, after a consultation with a sector 3 general practitioner, patients are reimbursed only a few cents. Under the new measure, costs for prescribed medications and care will rise sharply for their patients.

Dr. Kamyar Dadsetan, president of the sector 3 doctors' union (MS3), denounced the decision in early March to Le Quotidien du médecin. This small group of liberal doctors is voicing its anger against a restriction that limits their independent practice.

مقالات ذات صلة

Dramatic illustration of French government ministers debating social security budget amendment in National Assembly amid opposition protests and crisis warnings.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Government considers amendment for social security budget

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Two days before the crucial vote at the National Assembly on the 2026 social security budget, the government is preparing a possible amendment to increase health spending by 3% to win over the Ecologists. The bill includes the suspension of the retirement reform but faces strong opposition from the right and far right. Ministers warn of a political, economic, and social crisis if it is rejected.

Thousands of liberal doctors begin a strike from Monday, January 5, through January 15, protesting measures in the social security budget passed on December 16. Consultations and scheduled operations will be halted, with hospital disruptions from January 10 to 14. A demonstration is planned in Paris on January 10.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Following the fiscal 2026 budget's record ¥39.06 trillion allocation for social security, Japan's government has finalized two key reform measures to curb soaring medical costs, including higher patient copayments and limits on insurance for certain drugs. Officials emphasize the need for clear explanations to secure public understanding.

The Senate's social affairs commission amended the bill on the 'right to assisted dying' on Wednesday, January 7, renaming it 'medical assistance in dying' to limit access to patients at the very end of life. Senators toned down the deputies' initial text, which used a broader criterion of 'vital prognosis engaged.' This initiative, pledged by Emmanuel Macron, will be debated in session from January 20 to 28.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The French government has formalized the suspension of the pension reform until January 2028 through a rectificative letter to the social security budget, presented on October 23, 2025. This measure, costing 100 million euros in 2026 and 1.4 billion in 2027, will be funded by under-indexing pensions and increasing contributions from health insurers. Unions and opposition parties denounce an unfair burden on current retirees.

French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has announced the suspension of the 2023 pension reform, deferring discussions on age and contribution duration until after the 2027 presidential election. The move aims to stabilize the budget amid democratic distrust, but it sparks debate on implications for equality and professional inequalities. Experts note that the reform's foundations remain unchanged, while urging fixes for disparities, especially for women and seniors.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The French government has decided to keep hospital tariffs at 2025 levels for 2026, with no increase despite inflation and strains on human resources. Hospital federations, both public and private, denounce this as a disguised massive savings plan and call for at least a 1% rise. This comes after Parliament adopted a hospital budget boosted by 850 million euros.

 

 

 

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