logo
Travel smart: European Health Insurance Card gives access to public healthcare

Travel smart: European Health Insurance Card gives access to public healthcare

RTÉ News​14 hours ago

The European Health Insurance Card is a valuable resouce for Irish people planning to holiday in Europe this summer.
It provides access to public healthcare in other EU countries on the same basis as local citizens.
It is one of the benefits of Ireland being a member of the European Union.
What is the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC)?
The EHIC is a free card issued by the Health Service Executive. It proves that the holder is entitled to receive necessary public healthcare in another European country while visiting for a holiday, a business trip, or study.
"The European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) is an essential back-up for anyone travelling within the EU," says Patrick Brennan, Health Insurance Expert with NFP Ireland. "It gives you access to public healthcare services if you fall ill or have an accident abroad, often at reduced cost or even free."
The EHIC does not cover private medical treatment, or medical repatriation, or other common issues that holidaymakers face, like flight cancellations or lost baggage.
Dominic Lumsden, spokesman for Peopl Insurance, recommends travellers within the EU bring their European Health Insurance Card with them.
"While it's not a substitute for travel insurance, it's a valuable extra layer of protection, especially if you fall ill or need emergency treatment while abroad."
Key benefits for Irish holidaymakers
Peace of Mind: Holidays should be relaxed and enjoyable, but it is no fun getting sick or injured while abroad. With the EHIC, Irish tourists have access to public healthcare systems in Europe without the stress of high medical costs.
Ease of Access: The card simplifies the process of receiving treatment abroad. Presenting the EHIC at a public hospital or doctor's office provides access to the same services as local people, removing the need to pay upfront or claim reimbursement in many cases.
Cost-Effective: While the EHIC is not a substitute for travel insurance, it can significantly reduce or eliminate the cost of medical care in the event of an emergency. This can be especially useful for minor illnesses or injuries.
Validity across Europe: The EHIC is accepted in all 27 EU member states, as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland.
How to Apply
Irish residents can apply for or renew their EHIC for free through the HSE website or local health office. It's advisable to apply well in advance of your holiday because it takes up to 10 days for the card to be delivered.
"We'd advise holidaymakers to carry both their EHIC and a robust travel insurance policy that covers disruption from protests, strikes, extreme weather, and other unexpected events," says Mr Lumsden, Peopl Insurance.
Mr Brennan says it important to check if your card has expired before heading abroad; it is typically valid for 4 years. "If it's expired, you won't be covered, so it's important to renew in time, which can be done easily and for free through the HSE. Don't leave it until the last minute."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Irish family in desperate race to bring mum home after dream holiday turns into nightmare
Irish family in desperate race to bring mum home after dream holiday turns into nightmare

Extra.ie​

time4 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

Irish family in desperate race to bring mum home after dream holiday turns into nightmare

A close-knit Dublin community is rallying together to help bring beloved mother and friend Joan home after she suffered a devastating cardiac arrest while on holiday in Spain. Joan, who was enjoying her first family holiday in over 20 years, is now in a medically induced coma in intensive care. What began as a long-awaited and well-deserved break has turned into every family's worst nightmare. Described by friends as 'funny, selfless, and always there when others needed her,' Joan receiving round-the-clock care in a Spanish hospital. Her condition remains critical, and her only chance of returning home to continue treatment in Ireland is via a specialised medical flight – a costly lifeline. A close-knit Dublin community is rallying together to help bring beloved mother and friend Joan home after she suffered a devastating cardiac arrest while on holiday in Spain. Pic: Shutterstock Joan's lifelong friend Debbie has launched a public appeal to raise €50,000 to fund the air ambulance and support the family. 'Doctors have told us the only safe way to bring Joan home is on a medical plane,' Debbie explained. 'But the cost is astronomical. Her travel insurance won't cover the flight unless she can walk onto a plane with a doctor, which simply isn't possible right now.' Joan's daughters, who rushed to her side, are also facing mounting expenses as they remain in Spain, including high-season accommodation costs, food, and transportation, all while being away from work and under extreme emotional strain. Despite the heartache, there's been a glimmer of hope: Joan has responded positively to heart medication, though a new infection has now delayed plans for her journey home. Joan, who was enjoying her first family holiday in over 20 years, is now in a medically induced coma in intensive care. Pic: GoFundMe 'We've been blown away by the kindness and generosity of people,' Debbie said in a recent update. 'We're almost in a position to arrange the medical flight once Joan is stable enough, but the process of releasing funds is slower than we expected. We just need your prayers and positive thoughts now more than ever.' The campaign has already seen a wave of support from the Irish public, but more is needed to help cover the urgent costs and bring Joan back to the care of her loved ones at home. 'Joan would be the first to help someone in need,' Debbie added. 'Now it's her turn — and we need all the help we can get to bring her home safely.' To donate, click here.

People urged to welcome new laws on organ donation
People urged to welcome new laws on organ donation

Irish Examiner

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

People urged to welcome new laws on organ donation

The daughter of a Thurles woman who died suddenly from a brain aneurism and gave life to three people through organ donation has urged people to welcome new laws on donation. The Human Tissue Act 2024 is in place from Tuesday. It brings in altruistic living organ donation to strangers for the first time in Ireland, and sees the creation of an opt-out register. Every year about 30,000 people die in Ireland. Less than 100 become organ donors typically. From Tuesday only relatives of people whose names are not on a register will be asked about possible organ donation at death. Roselyn Grufferty said the death of her mother, Rose Moloney, at just 66 in 2017 was shocking. 'She was in the prime of her health. She was out golfing the day before, she went to a charity bridge event that morning and she was waiting to go to bridge that night and it just happened all of a sudden,' she recalled. She was cared for at Clonmel Hospital — now Tipperary University Hospital. When the family were asked about organ donation, they agreed without hesitation. 'They prep you so well in the hospital. They go through everything with you and the team were just fantastic, they made us feel at peace and at ease,' she said. They gave us time, my sister was able to come home from America and say goodbye to her before they pronounced the time of death. The donated organs were shared with three people. 'We have received letters from the recipients of mum's organs,' she said. 'That's very comforting for us that they're out there, living their best life. And it's great that mum is out there somewhere.' Ms Moloney had carried an organ-donor card since the 1970s, a hand-written card as was the style then. 'It was lovely to find that card, and for us to be at peace and know we respected her wishes to donate,' her daughter said. She called on people to learn how the new law works, saying: 'Don't be afraid to have the conversation, let your loved ones know your wishes." Positive step in the right direction Irish Kidney Association national advocacy and projects manager Colin White also welcomed the Act. 'I don't think in its own right it is going to be a massive gamechanger but I will say it's a very positive step in t he right direction,' he said. The Act is part of on-going moves to improve the Irish organ donation system, he added. 'The role of the family remains,' he stressed even for people not on the opt-out register. He welcomed too another significant change for kidney donations under this Act. 'Part of the legislation is the introduction of altruistic organ donation, that's where a member of the public can decide 'I'd like to donate my kidney' to a stranger,' he said. Adults can donate to people on Irish waiting lists, if they match and other strict criteria are met. He called on people to carry a signed organ donor card, saying asking a family member to be the co-signatory on this can open the conversation.

Laura Nolan Horgan: 'A tablecloth makes people sit longer at the table'
Laura Nolan Horgan: 'A tablecloth makes people sit longer at the table'

Irish Examiner

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Laura Nolan Horgan: 'A tablecloth makes people sit longer at the table'

When Laura Nolan Horgan started LNH Edit online four years ago, she thought she had bought enough stock to last for an entire season, but then sold out over a weekend. It was the start of her fast becoming the leading light in Irish tablescaping textiles for all of us interiors aficionadas who unleash our creativity on the blank canvas that is our kitchen table. Since then, her tablecloth and napkin designs have evolved into cushion covers and removable lampshade covers to add an injection of colour, but are easily changed when you redo your décor. They're eye-catching, as are her conversation-piece accessories and a nightwear range, the latter having just been picked up by Brown Thomas. 'We have a vision board and BT was on it, but it's now ticked off,' says Laura, who recently dispatched her 20,000th order, having had a booming Easter. 'This year, we couldn't keep up with tablecloth orders. I think there's less pressure at Easter than Christmas as there are no gifts, so there's more time to decorate.' Given the age of the business, you might imagine it was lockdown inspiration which launched it, like it was for so many others, but it actually grew out of personal adversity when Laura discovered she carries the BRCA1 gene mutation. With its heightened risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer, she underwent a mastectomy and hysterectomy in her early 30s while raising three young children. It was during the course of her recovery that lockdown started. 'My husband encouraged me to launch during covid,' she says. 'It gave me something to think about other than my health, but my health has also made me shape my priorities and be more in tune with the smaller things in life now. 'I work between 9am and 2pm, and then I'm mom. When they're in bed, I do a few more hours, and I'm growing the team, so I'll get a bit more time.' It's also informed her wider ethos focusing on sustainability and ethical practices, including her relationship with two artisan families in India who make all her fabrics, a place which has also proved to be a source of design inspiration. 'When we're there, we stay at the Khoti guest house in Jaipur,' says Laura. 'It's a home from home for us, our hub, and it's where the inspiration for one of our designs came from. The headboard in my bedroom has a vintage palm tree design, and it's now in one of our summer designs.' Laura's love of tablescaping with vintage tomato, olive and drinks cans and bottles has become a range of ceramic vases, planters and cutlery holders; from €9.50. Back at home in Dublin, she launched the palm tree design this week, along with a second one featuring bold stripes with a crab motif printed from a mango wood carving. It's all about summer entertaining or just making al fresco dining a bit more special. Both looks are the latest in what are four main collections annually. 'To brighten up the patio we also have cushion covers so you can match your cushions to your tablecloth,' says Laura, who also practices what she preaches, always having tablecloths as a feature of daily family life and one that seems to have a positive impact on her family, including Elizabeth, 11; Hugo, 10, and Toby, seven. 'We use a tablecloth every night, but my husband and I noticed that when one time I didn't use a cloth that the children got up quickly from the table,' she says. 'A cloth makes people sit longer at the table, I think.' Blue and white are summer fabric colours ideal for a picnic or a relaxed lunch on the deck; Blue Crab tablecloth, from €79.50, with napkins, €39.50 for four, Maybe it's the sense of effort and ritual, something she may have picked up from her mother, who she speaks of having an 'amazing eye', and how she always had a beautiful table. Fabric is probably in her DNA, too, as her mother is Fran Nolan of the fashion retailer, Fran & Jane. It's here Laura's career started and where she became creative director, and later a buyer for Penneys. The skills and experience she acquired no doubt transferred to LNH Edit to create a curation of covetable home textiles and wares reflecting her personal taste rather than the vagaries of trends. The Red Crab tablecloth with napkins injects subtle fun to a summer tabletop; tablecloth from €79.50, napkins, €39.50 for four. 'I don't follow trends, but I have a style,' she says. 'I adore colour, slightly boho, eclectic, English country garden meets Long Island, The Hamptons, New England vibe. Bits of happiness, and if you can add a little of this into your home, how bad.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store