Hospitals in France


French hospitals are places designed to care for patients suffering from illnesses and traumas too complex to be treated at home or in a doctor's office.
In France, as part of a public service mission, hospitals can carry out complementary missions, notably in the fields of prevention, professional training, and research.

Status of French hospitals
[edit]The French hospital system comprises both public and private healthcare establishments. The Public Health Code distinguishes between three types of establishment:[1]
- Public health establishments : These are state-run hospitals operated as public entities;
- Private for-profit hospitals: These are commercial enterprises where physicians typically work as self-employed professionals;
- Private non-profit hospitals: Managed by associations governed by the 1901 law, mutual insurance organizations, or foundations, these institutions pursue healthcare missions without a profit motive.
Types of public hospitals
[edit]With the exception of military hospitals (Hôpitaux d'instruction des armées, HIA), public hospitals are constituted as public health establishments.[2] There are several categories:
- Regional Hospital Centers (Centres Hospitliers Régionaux, CHR): these establishments are highly specialized in various fields of medicine and surgery, and are equipped with extensive technical facilities. A CHR is generally also a teaching hospital (Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, CHU): this is a facility that has signed an agreement with a medical university to provide practical teaching for medical students in several medical disciplines.
- National Hospitals Centers (Centres Hospitaliers Nationaux, CHN): there are two of these: the Quinze-Vingts National Ophthalmology Hospital[3] and the Fresnes National Public Health Establishment (dedicated to prisoners).
- Hospital Centers (Centres Hospitaliers, CH): providing a full range of medical, surgical and obstetric (médecine, chirurgie ou obstétrique, MCO) services.
- Local Hospitals (Hôpitaux Locaux, HL): these establishments have a low level of medicalization. Care is usually provided by general practitioners in private practice. This category of establishment is no longer mentioned in the public health code.
- Specialized Hospital Centers (Centres Hospitaliers Spécialisés, CHS): these specialized mental health establishments were set up by the law of June 30, 1838.
HIAs are establishments attached to the Ministry of the Armed Forces, and more specifically to the Armed Forces Health Service. They are primarily intended for military personnel injured in the line of duty but are open to all.[4]
Distribution
[edit]Type of establishment | Entities | Beds | Outpatient beds |
---|---|---|---|
Public Sector | 987 | 288 866 | 31 238 |
CHR and CHU | 29 | 78 065 | 6 272 |
Hospital Centers (CH) | 504 | 157 815 | 10 834 |
Specialized Hospital Centers (CHS) | 87 | 28 954 | 13 927 |
Local Hospitals (HL) | 347 | 22 239 | 54 |
Other public establishments | 20 | 1 793 | 151 |
Private sector | 1 869 | 154 901 | 19 480 |
Acute or multidisciplinary care facility | 801 | 80 964 | 10 340 |
Cancer research centers | 20 | 2 979 | 571 |
Establishment for the fight against mental illness | 242 | 17 886 | 4 805 |
Follow-up care and rehabilitation facility | 664 | 45 387 | 3 682 |
Long-term care facility | 112 | 6 609 | 24 |
Other private establishments | 30 | 1 076 | 58 |
TOTAL | 2 856 | 443 767 | 50 718 |
Source: Le Panorama des établissements de santé 2007. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques. Figures updated to December 31, 2005.[5] |
Type of establishment | Entities | Beds | Places ambulatoires |
---|---|---|---|
Public Sector | 983 | 284 140 | 35 705 |
CHR and CHU | 31 | 79 154 | 7 720 |
Hospital Centers (CH) | 511 | 155 713 | 13 233 |
Specialized Hospital Centers (CHS) | 90 | 28 019 | 14 369 |
Local Hospitals (HL) | 334 | 19 610 | 220 |
Other public establishments | 17 | 1 644 | 163 |
Private sector | 1 801 | 156 287 | 22 824 |
Acute or multidisciplinary care facility | 750 | 80 807 | 11 992 |
Cancer research centers | 20 | 2 846 | 678 |
Establishment for the fight against mental illness | 237 | 17 822 | 5 145 |
Follow-up care and rehabilitation facility | 674 | 47 959 | 4 732 |
Long-term care facility | 84 | 5 181 | 25 |
Other private establishments | 36 | 1 672 | 252 |
TOTAL | 2 784 | 440 427 | 58 529 |
Source: Le panorama des établissements de santé - édition 2010. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques. Figures updated to December 31, 2008.[6] |
Type of establishment | Entities | Beds | Places ambulatoires |
---|---|---|---|
Public Sector | 931 | 258 158 | 40 132 |
CHR and CHU | 32 | 74 783 | 9 287 |
Hospital Centers (CH), including former local hospitals | 789 | 153 456 | 15 847 |
Specialized Hospital Centers (CHS) | 88 | 26 707 | 14 579 |
Other public establishments | 22 | 3 212 | 419 |
Private non-profit sector | 699 | 58 137 | 12 342 |
Cancer research centers | 18 | 2 889 | 856 |
Other private non-profit establishments | 681 | 55 248 | 11 486 |
Private for-profit sector | 1 030 | 98 545 | 15 575 |
Acute or multidisciplinary care facility | 542 | 59 458 | 12 133 |
Cancer research centers | 20 | 2 846 | 678 |
Establishment for the fight against mental illness | 140 | 11 735 | 1 037 |
Follow-up care and rehabilitation facility | 324 | 25 999 | 2 308 |
Long-term care facility | 12 | 508 | 24 |
Other private establishments | 12 | 845 | 73 |
TOTAL | 2 660 | 414 840 | 68 049 |
Source: Le panorama des établissements de santé - 2014 edition. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques. Figures updated to December 31, 2012.[7] |
Activity
[edit]In 2006, nearly 8.4 million people were hospitalized in public health establishments, 260,000 more than in 2004. 3.5 million people were hospitalized in private for-profit hospitals and 1.2 million in private community hospitals. In 2008, there were 11.9 million full-time hospital admissions and 13.2 million admissions to partial hospitalization or day care.[8]
Hospital capacity
[edit]Bed capacity
[edit]In 2006, the total number of hospital beds was 451,652: 293,667 in the public sector (public health establishments), 94,571 in private for-profit hospitals, and 63,414 in private community hospitals.[9]
Over the past few decades, the number of beds in the French hospital system has fallen steadily, from 612,898 in 1982 to 428,987 in 2013, a decline of 30%. During the same period, the French population grew from 55.7 million to 66 million, an increase of 18.5%; the number of hospital beds per capita therefore fell by just over 40%, from 11 beds per 1,000 inhabitants to 6.5.[10] In 2023, the number of beds in the French hospital system will be 369,400, all types of establishment combined;[9] with a population of 68,373,433 for the country as a whole, the number of hospital beds per 1,000 inhabitants is therefore 5.4.[11]
The number of beds corresponds to the total number of beds in the French hospital system, both public and private. The French population is expressed here in tens of thousands of inhabitants.[9]
In 2017, there were just under 400,000 full-time hospital beds, 69,000 fewer than in 2003, and even 100,000 fewer than in the previous 20 years. Conversely, in the follow-up care and rehabilitation sector (SSR), the number of beds rose from 92,000 in 2003 to 106,000 in 2017.[12]
More precisely, the 3,046 public and private healthcare establishments had 399,865 beds in 2017. In twenty years, no less than one bed in five has thus been eliminated, the decline having been partly offset by the creation of “partial hospitalization” places in 2017, i.e. hospitalization for less than a day.[13]
Number of beds and staff
[edit]The administrative opening of a bed in a hospital department requires a minimum number of staff, according to a legal framework:
Article D.6124-32 of the French Public Health Code states that, under the responsibility of a senior nurse, the paramedical team of an adult intensive care unit must include two nurses for every five patients, and one nurse's aide for every four intensive care beds. In reality, some beds may remain open without meeting these standards.[14]
Article D.6124-34-5 specifies that in a specialized pediatric intensive care unit, the team comprises one nurse for every two patients. In the birthing sector, the number of paramedical staff may never be less than one nurse's aide or nursery assistant, present at all times (article D.6124-44 CSP). For each operation in the cardiac surgery department, two nurses, including one operating room nurse, are present in the room.[15]

Staff
[edit]Hospital payroll accounts for 70% of total expenditure. This wage bill can therefore be used as a budgetary adjustment variable. Between 2003 and 2007, 5,200 new staff were hired. However, hospital unions have repeatedly denounced staff shortages.[16]
Public hospitals employ a wide range of staff with different statuses depending on their function:
- Administrative and nursing staff are generally civil servants (agents de la fonction publique hospitalière);
- Medical staff are generally hospital civil servants under the authority of the C.N.G.;
- Civil servants, in particular hospital students and interns undergoing their initial training;
- Civil servants on secondment from other ministries, government departments, or agencies.
Financing
[edit]Hospital spending
[edit]The French Social Security Financing Act (LFSS) for 2009 provided for €50.9 billion in spending on public and private hospitals, out of a total of €157.6 billion in healthcare expenditure. The budget for outpatient care in 2009 was 73.2 billion euros. This represented a 3.2% increase in the hospital budget. Ten years later, the projected 2019 budget for public hospitals was 82 billion euros, up 2 billion over 1 year thanks to the increase in activity-based pricing.[17]
Public/private alignment
[edit]In return for identical services, public hospitals receive more from social security than private clinics. But public and private tariffs had to be aligned by 2018. This public/private tariff alignment represented 7 billion in annual savings for public hospitals. Public hospitals, led by the university hospitals, justified their higher rates by specific missions (emergencies, teaching, research, etc.). However, they received lump-sum allocations (Missions d’Intérêt Général et d’Aide à la Contractualisation , MIGAC; and Missions d’Enseignement, de Recherche, de Référence et d’Innovation , MERRI) to carry out these missions, the amounts of which were not justified by a precise cost analysis.[18]
In 2011, the French federation of clinics (FHP-MCO) filed a complaint against France in Brussels for distortion of competition. In September 2011, the French Cour des Comptes recommended more methodical preparation for this deadline, which was enshrined in law but had already been postponed once.[19][20]
Safety and working conditions
[edit]Hospital staff are often confronted with violence.[21] The Observatoire national des violences en milieu de soins (ONVS), an organization under the supervision of the Ministry, in its 2015 report noted a “worsening sense of insecurity felt by healthcare staff.” This violence ranges from insults to physical assaults.[22]
The ONVS counts an act of violence every 30 minutes in French hospitals, a total of 14,502 reports of attacks on people and property in 2014.[23] Nurses are the first to be affected. Physical violence, which is proportionally the most frequent, is on the rise, with 5,119 reports.[23]
In the years 2000-2010, community tension became a new element in violence, with emergency departments and maternity wards the most affected.[24] There has been an increase in violence observed in certain obstetrics gynecology departments in the Paris region and several large cities. According to Le Monde, “fundamentalist husbands refuse to allow their wives to be examined, treated or delivered by a man. They vigorously demand it, even if it means endangering their wives and physically attacking the practitioner on duty".[25]
In September 2013, after several serious incidents, the management of the Marseille Hospitals (Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Marseille, AP-HM) was forced to take a series of “measures to guarantee staff safety”.[26]
Hospital reforms
[edit]1991 hospital reform
[edit]This law, prepared over a period of three years and championed by ministers Claude Évin and Bruno Durieux, strengthened hospital planning, making the health map dependent on a regional health organization plan (Schéma Régional d'Organisation Sanitaire , SROS), re-evaluated every five years. Establishments are required to produce projects.[27]
2003 hospital reform
[edit]Since January 1, 2003, the Hospital Plan 2007 has rapidly introduced a number of far-reaching changes to the way public hospitals operate:[28][29]
- The creation of “hospital activity clusters”.
- The introduction of a new budgetary system: the statement of projected income and expenditure (EPRD). Under the previous system, the execution of one year's budget was assessed the following year, allowing hospitals to exceed their allocated budget. By estimating and sanctioning any risk of overspending at an early stage, the EPRD makes financial logic prevail in hospital management. Henceforth, it is no longer their activity that determines the resources (and therefore expenditure) they need, but rather the revenue available to them, which determines their expenditure, their investments, and therefore their activity.
- The implementation of a new financing method: activity-based pricing or T2A . Until 2004, around three-quarters of the budget of public hospitals consisted of a lump-sum grant allocated by the Ministry of Health, irrespective of the volume, nature, and evolution of their activity. Under T2A (tarification à l'activité), hospitals are now financed on the basis of their actual activity. For each procedure, each practice, and each type of care, there is a corresponding tariff: public funding of hospitals now depends on the number of procedures performed and the tariffs charged for them. Tarification à l'activité (T2A) is a reform whose objectives were to put an end to the current financing of hospitals. Whatever their activity, evolution, dynamism or inertia, the overall allocation to hospitals tended to remain unchanged.
These major reforms have had a profound effect on the activity and internal organization of public hospitals. Their exceptional nature stems from the concomitance and brevity of their implementation period.[30]
Rankings
[edit]The magazines Le Point and Le Nouvel Observateur publish an annual honor roll of the best hospitals in France.[31]
Controversies
[edit]On November 5, 2008, the presidents of the medical advisory committees (commission médicale d’établissement, CCM) of the hospitals of the Greater Paris University Hospitals (Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, AP-HP) sent an open letter entitled Sauver l'hôpital public (Save the public hospital) to the French Minister of Health. In it, they denounced “budget cuts with no clearly identified medical or public health objectives” and “very short-term savings at any price”, deeming that “quality” and “access to care for all” would “suffer” as a result of these spending cuts.[32]
On July 7, 2021, the Notre hôpital c'est vous collective submitted a draft law on “universal access to a high-quality public hospital service” to the Constitutional Council in order to open a shared-initiative referendum on the text. This project, which aimed to achieve an increase in the number of beds and caregivers, was rejected on August 6.[33][34]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Modernisation de l'action publique" [Modernizing public action]. Institut Montaigne (in French). 2005. Archived from the original on 19 February 2013. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Médecine hospitalière" [Hospital medicine]. Ministère des Armées (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Bienvenue sur le site internet du Centre Hospitalier National d'Ophtalmologie des Quinze-Vingts à Paris" [Welcome to the website of the Centre Hospitalier National d'Ophtalmologie des Quinze-Vingts in Paris]. Quinze-Vingts (in French). Archived from the original on 10 April 2012. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Les hôpitaux militaires" [Military hospitals]. Ministère des Armes (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Le Panorama des établissements de santé 2007" [Panorama of healthcare facilities 2007]. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques (in French). 2005.
- ^ "Le panorama des établissements de santé - édition 2010" [The panorama of healthcare facilities - 2010 edition]. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques (in French). 2008.
- ^ "Le panorama des établissements de santé - édition 2014" [The panorama of healthcare facilities - 2014 edition]. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques (in French). 2012.
- ^ "Panorama des établissements de santé 2010" [Panorama of healthcare facilities 2010]. Direction de la recherche, des études, de l'évaluation et des statistiques (in French). 2012.
- ^ a b c Boisguérin, Bénédicte (2024). "En 2023, la baisse du nombre de lits et la hausse du nombre de places se poursuivent –Premiers résultats de la base administrative de la statistique annuelle des établissements de santé (SAE) 2023" [In 2023, the decline in the number of beds and the increase in the number of places continues -First results from the administrative database of the annual statistics on healthcare establishments (SAE) 2023]. Études et résultats (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Données de la Banque mondiale, compilées par l'université de Sherbrooke" [World Bank data, compiled by Université de Sherbrooke]. Perspective Monde (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Population au 1er janvier" [Population at January 1]. Insee (in French). 2025. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ Bayle-Iniguez, Anne (2019). "Hospitalisation complète : 69 000 lits en moins en 15 ans !" [Full hospitalization: 69,000 fewer beds in 15 years!]. Le Quotidien du Medecin (in French).
- ^ "Urgences en crise : 100 000 lits ont été supprimés en 20 ans" [Emergency departments in crisis: 100,000 beds eliminated in 20 years]. Top Santé (in French). 2019. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Code de la santé publique" [Public Health Code]. Légifrance (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ Tamburini, Stéphanie (2025). "Les effectifs infirmiers en établissement de santé" [Nursing staff in health care institutions]. Macsf (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ Benkimoun, Paul (2008). "La qualité de l'hôpital public mise en accusation" [Public hospital quality under fire]. Le Monde (in French).
- ^ "Budget des hôpitaux : une hausse de 2 milliards d'euros pour 2019" [Hospital budget: a 2 billion euro increase for 2019]. www.ars.sante.fr (in French). 2019. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "Rapport public annuel de la Cour des comptes - 2018" [Annual public report of the Court of Auditors - 2018]. Vie publique (in French). 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "TARIFS HOSPITALIERS : LES CLINIQUES ET HÔPITAUX PRIVÉS MCO PORTENT PLAINTE À BRUXELLES POUR ATTEINTE À LA LIBRE CONCURRENCE" [HOSPITAL TARIFFS: MCO PRIVATE CLINICS AND HOSPITALS LODGE A COMPLAINT WITH BRUSSELS FOR UNDERMINING FREE COMPETITION]. FHP MCO (in French). 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ "La Sécu «droguée» à la dette, s'alarme Migaud" [Social security “addicted” to debt, warns Migaud]. Économie (in French). 2011.
- ^ "L'insécurité et la violence progressent dans les hôpitaux" [Insecurity and violence on the rise in hospitals]. Marianne (in French). 2011.
- ^ Jouan, Anne; Mascret, Damien (2016). "Les hôpitaux français malades de la violence" [French hospitals sick of violence]. Le Figaro (in French).
- ^ a b "Hôpitaux : un acte de violence toutes les 30 minutes" [Hospitals: an act of violence every 30 minutes]. France Info (in French). 2016. Retrieved 16 May 2025.
- ^ Beyer, Caroline (2016). "L'hôpital sous tension communautaire" [Hospital under community stress]. Le Figaro (in French).
- ^ Cojean, Annick (2007). "Hôpital : laïcité et intégrisme s'affrontent" [Hospital: secularism and fundamentalism clash]. Le Monde (in French).
- ^ "Marseille : les hôpitaux adoptent 30 mesures contre la violence" [Marseilles: hospitals adopt 30 measures to combat violence]. Le Nouvel Obs (in French). 2013.
- ^ Vanecloo, Pierre (1993). "L'écriture de projets dans les hôpitaux : Loi du 31 juillet 1991" [Writing projects in hospitals: Law of July 31, 1991]. Études de Communication (in French) (Supplément 1993): 105–109. doi:10.4000/edc.2712.
- ^ Bréchat, Pierre-Henri (2010). "Des pôles d'activités hospitaliers entre gestion de la crise et mise en œuvre d'une politique de santé publique" [Hospital clusters between crisis management and public health policy implementation]. Santé publique (in French). 22 (5): 571–580. doi:10.3917/spub.105.0571.
- ^ Bréchat, Pierre-Henri (2008). "Éléments pour un premier bilan et des perspectives du plan Hôpital 2007" [Initial assessment and outlook for the 2007 Hospital Plan]. Santé Publique (in French). 20 (6): 611–621. doi:10.3917/spub.086.0611. PMID 19435541.
- ^ "Accueil". Robert Holcman. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 15 May 2025.
- ^ "Tableau d'Honneur des établissements publics - Palmarès des Hôpitaux et Cliniques 2019 - Le Point". Le Point (in French).
- ^ "Loi Bachelot : le risque d'achever l'hôpital public" [Loi Bachelot: the risk of putting an end to public hospitals]. Le Figaro (in French). 2008.
- ^ "Un projet de référendum sur l'hôpital public déposé au Conseil constitutionnel" [Draft referendum on public hospitals submitted to the Constitutional Council]. Le Monde (in French). 2021.
- ^ "Le Conseil constitutionnel rejette un projet de référendum sur l'hôpital public" [Constitutional Council rejects referendum on public hospitals]. France Info (in French). 2021.