State medical aid is “controlled”, but “deserves to be adapted”, according to a report

State medical aid (AME) for technical inspection. This system for undocumented foreigners, recently called into question by the Senate in the immigration bill, is “generally controlled”, but “deserves to be adapted”, according to the report submitted Monday to the government by Claude Evin and Patrick Stefanini .

The report, which underlines the “health usefulness” of the AME, points out the “limits and risks” of its replacement by more restrictive “emergency medical aid”, as advocated by the right. However, it proposes a strengthening of controls and “eligibility criteria”, particularly with regard to family situation.

No proposal from the report can be integrated into the current project

The government underlined following the publication of the document that “the proposals formulated by the rapporteurs may be subject to regulatory or legislative developments in a specific text”. “For the record, no proposal relating to the AME can be integrated into the immigration bill currently under examination, these provisions being unrelated to the subject of the text,” the executive also recalled in its press release.

For the rapporteurs, the AME is “a regulatory framework, implemented and controlled professionally by the Health Insurance services and which does not generate healthcare consumption revealing atypicalities, abuse or fraud structural”.

The report notes that the increase in AME expenditure (which represented 968 million euros in 2022) is “largely correlated with that of the number of beneficiaries”, and that average quarterly consumption “remained stable despite the “increase in the cost of care”, going from “642 euros in 2009 to 604 euros in 2022”.

source site