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HEALTH

‘Ageing well’ – France’s new law to support the elderly and carers

France's parliament recently adopted legislation to better assist the elderly and carers - here's what is included.

'Ageing well' - France's new law to support the elderly and carers
An elderly patient at her house in Fabas, southwestern France, during a visit with a doctor. (Photo by Charly TRIBALLEAU / AFP)

In early April, France’s parliament voted in favour of the ‘ageing well’ (bien vieillir) law – measures meant for elderly people and those that care for them, including helping people to remain independent longer and offering more support for carers.

As of 2023, 21.3 percent of France’s population were over 65 years old and by 2030, over 65s are projected to outnumber those under 15. 

France already has a robust system of help for older people – Explained: The help available for older people in France

But the new law is focused on helping people to ‘age better’, for example by staying in their own homes for longer or measures to avoid loneliness.

Community support

Loneliness – To combat social isolation, the law will allow social and health services to consult a town hall’s register of ‘vulnerable people’ (which exists for emergencies such as heat waves or health crises) to better reach out to them to offer help and support if required.

New government organisations – Thanks to the bien vieillir law, a new government body within each French département – the service public départemental de l’autonomie, or SPDA – will be created. These will serve as ‘one-stop shops’ for all information about supporting elderly and disabled people, as well as their caregivers.

The law also creates a ‘national autonomy conference’, similar to the national disability conference that takes place every three years. This will allow for more guidelines and debates surrounding policy to help people maintain their independence.

The Icope programme – Created by the WHO, this framework allows for the identification of physical and mental decline. The new law will make the ‘Icope programme’ accessible via an app.

This is meant to encourage more people to take the self-assessment to catch the first signs of a loss of autonomy. The law also plans for future steps that will involve inviting people aged 60-65 and 70-75 to autonomy loss ‘prevention appointments’.

Expanding local support teams –  Currently, France has 24 ‘local teams’ (called EQLAAT) to help the elderly with daily tasks (referred to in French as aide technique) such as travel, meals, washing, and dressing. These teams are made up of occupational therapists and social workers. Starting in 2025 the EQLAAT teams will be generalised across the country.

READ MORE: How older people in France can get free assistance for outings

Legal framework

The law also includes several provisions to strengthen legal protections for older people, and to keep the issue higher on the political agenda.

Multi-annual programming law – Every five years, French lawmakers will be required to propose and vote on a law that would re-evaluate strategy, governance, funding and programming for the elderly.

Fighting against elder abuse – There are several measures meant to better protect people in care facilities from abuse. The first is that all care-home residents, as well as hospitalised people, will be asked to designate a ‘trusted person’. This could be a family member or the attending physician, and once the designation is made, their role will be clarified.

The law also creates a special government unit that will process complaints about mistreatment of the elderly and disabled. They will then centralise all reports that have been sent in using the national abuse ‘alert number’ (3977).

Judicial protection – When to comes to the French equivalent options to power of attorney and guardianship, the law will also try to streamline and better identify the roles of legal representatives. By the end of 2026, there will be a clear national register better outlining all of the protection measures for the guardianship and protection of vulnerable adults.

READ MORE: GUIDE: Guardianship or power of attorney options in France for elderly or vulnerable people

Care workers

A major problem is the shortage of care workers and home-helps (aide domiciles) since the job tends to be low-paid and under-valued.

Home-help workers – Home-help workers will be issued special ‘professional cards’ starting in 2025. This is aimed at better recognising those working in the sector and it will be distributed to those with two years’ experience working in the field. In practice, this will help those in the sector with daily life too – as they may be able to park their vehicles in limited traffic areas.

The law also provides for a larger budget within the ‘National Solidarity Fund of Autonomy’ which helps home-help workers with car and public transport expenses, as well as with obtaining driving licences. 

There are also plans to revise payment structures. Within the law for 10 départements to experiment with replacing hourly rates for home-help workers with flat or ‘global’ rates. The test would start in 2025 and run until 2026.

Care homes

Although the main focus is on allowing people to remain in their own homes for as long as possible, there are also several sections to cover the country’s care home sector.

Daily visiting rights – One aspect of the law that has attracted a lot of attention from the French press is the creation of a ‘daily visiting right’ for those in care facilities and in nursing homes (Ehpads). During the Covid-19 pandemic, many elderly people in nursing homes went months without seeing their loved ones.

As a result, people in care facilities will be able to have any visitor they wish to see, without prior registration with the establishment. Care homes will only be able to ban visitors in exceptional circumstances – for example if a visit poses a threat to public order or to the safety of the residents or staff.

When it comes to people in palliative or hospice care, the daily visitation right is clarified as ‘absolute’ – meaning even in the event of a serious health crisis, it would still be respected.

Pets and animals – The law also creates the legal right to have a pet for residents of care homes.

Previously it was up to the individual home whether people would be allowed to bring their pets with them when they moved in, but the new law makes this a legal right – with the rule that the residents are able to meet their pet’s needs and comply with health and safety regulations.

Nursing or care homes will also be able to limit the number of pets per resident. 

Family ties – Article 9 of the law will make it so that grandchildren will no longer be forced to help finance a grandparent’s accommodation in an Ehpad. Previously, all descendants, including grandchildren and great-grandchildren, were required to help fund living expenses (including care and clothing) for elderly family members in need, via the obligation alimentaire. Moving forward, older people in this situation will be able to access social assistance.

Similarly, children of parents convicted of a crime or sexual assault against the other parent or the children will also be exempt from the obligation alimentaire.

Regulating nursing homes – Ehpads will be subject to new quality assessments, which will be outlined by decree. There will also be new standards for the nutritional qualify of meals offered at care homes, with the goal of preventing and fighting against malnutrition.

Member comments

  1. That photo by Charly Triballeau is truly an artistic masterpiece! Note the shadows, colors, perspective and tone of the piece. Very reminiscent of Edward Hopper’s “Nighthawks”.
    Great photograph!

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For members

2024 EUROPEAN ELECTIONS

European elections: What are France’s têtes de liste?

Political news is set to fill a lot of the French news agenda over the coming weeks and you’ll hear a lot of talk about lists and 'têtes de liste' – but what do they mean, and what are the elections all about anyway?

European elections: What are France’s têtes de liste?

European elections are coming up in the first week in June – and although under EU law all countries must use voting systems that ensure proportional representation, each individual country has its own rules for voting.

France operates a ‘closed list’ policy – which means that you vote for a party, rather than an individual candidate at these elections. 

READ ALSO Can foreign residents in France vote in the European elections?

France used to divide its candidates into eight constituencies but these have now been abolished. Effectively, for the purposes of the European Parliamentary elections, France is a single constituency represented by 81 politicians – up from 79 at the last elections.

The number of MEPs (Members of the European Parliament) that each party gets is decided by the percentage of total votes that party receives. Parties must win at least 5 percent of the votes in order to send representatives to the Parliament.

Each party that plans to field candidates in the election supplies a list to France’s Interior Ministry. That full list was published in the Journal Officiel on Saturday, May 18th, and shows that 37 parties are fielding a total of 2,997 candidates to fill France’s allocation of seats.

In total, the post-election European Parliament will have 720 members, compared to 705 currently.

Tête de liste

The lists are defined by parties with their preferred candidates at the top – the first of these preferred candidates is the tête de liste (head of the list) and the de facto leader of the European election campaign. 

For example, Valérie Hayer is the tête de liste of Emmanuel Macron’s party group Renaissance while Jordan Bardella is tête de liste for the group representing Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rassemblement National. 

These politicians will be the first to be elected to the European parliament for their respective parties, based on vote share – and as both parties are predicted to get well over five percent, they’re virtually guaranteed a place in the European Parliament.

The last name on RN’s list is party vice-president (and mayor of Perpignan) Louis Aliot – as he is 81st on the list, he would only become an MEP if RN got almost 100 percent of the votes in France.

But the nature of the party over personality vote has already led to an unusual dynamic. Intriguingly, it’s French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal – who is, unsurprisingly, not running for a seat at the European Parliament – who will debate Bardella live on France 2 on Thursday, May 23rd, rather than Hayer, the nominal top politician in the government-backed groups European election campaign.

READ ALSO OPINION: A European disaster for Macron could lead to messy autumn elections in France

Once elected, most MEPs decide to join a pan-European political group. Prior to this election, MEPs from French parties were aligned with six European political groups out of the seven that make up the Parliament.

What do the polls say?

According to an Ispos poll published on May 16th for Radio France and Le Parisien, 31 percent of those questioned said they were ready to vote for a list led by the far-right’s Jordan Bardella. 

Centrist Hayer’s list ranks second, with around 16 percent of the intended votes, the centre-left Parti socialiste could collect 14.5 percent, followed by the far-left La France Insoumise at 8 percent, the right-wing Les Républicains at 7 percent while Les Ecologistes (green party) and the extreme-right Reconquête are projected to get 6.5 percent each. 

Crucially, however, there’s not much French interest in the ballot, with only 45 percent of those questioned intending to vote, according to the Ipsos survey.

In 2019, voter turnout was  50.12 percent, up more than 7.5 percentage points on the previous ballot in 2014.

The lists in full

Below are the politicians chosen as ‘head of the list’ for their parties, listed in order of their current polling

Jordan Bardella – Rassemblement National

Valérie Hayer – Renaissance (the grouping of Macron’s LREM party plus centrist Horizons and MoDem parties)

Raphaël Glucksmann – Parti Socialiste

Manon Aubry – La France Insoumise

François-Xavier Bellamy – Les Républicains

Marie Toussaint – Les Ecologistes 

Marion Maréchal – Recônquete

The below parties are projected to get below the 5 percent threshold, although there is always the possibility for an election surprise

Léon Deffontaines – Parti Communiste français

Hélène Thouy – Parti Animaliste

Jean Lasselle – Alliance rurale

Jean-Marc Governatori – Ecologie au centre

Nathalie Arthaud – Lutte ouvrière

Pierre Larrouturou – Nouvelle Donne – Allons Enfants 

Florian Philippot – Les Patriotes

Selma Labib – Nouveau parti anticapitaliste – Révolutionnaires

François Asselineau – Populaire républicaine

Nagib Azergui – Free Palestine

Guillaume Lacroix – Parti radical de gauche

Yann Wehrling – Ecologie Positive & Territoires

Caroline Zorn – Parti pirate

M. Fidèl (believed to be a pseudonym) – Pour une humanité souveraine

Philippe Ponge – Mouvement constituant populaire

Olivier Terrien – Parti révolutionnaire Communistes

Audric Alexandre – Parti des citoyens européens

Marine Cholley – Equinoxe

Michel Simonin – Paix et décroissance

Jean-Marc Fortané – Pour une autre Europe

Georges Kuzmanovic – Nous le peuple

Camille Adoue – Parti des travailleurs

Edouard Husson – Non ! Prenons-nous en mains

Pierre-Marie Bonneau – Les Nationalistes

Charles Hoareau – Association nationale des communistes

Francis Lalanne –  de la Résistance

Lorys Elmayan – La ruche citoyenne

Gaël Coste-Meunier – Droits du parent et de l’Infant

Hadama Traoré – Démocratie représentative

Laure Patas d’Illiers – Europe Démocratie Espéranto

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