Professional civil liability for healthcare: 2026 guide
Professional civil liability insurance for healthcare professionals: coverage, minimum amounts, exclusions and claims reporting.
Certyneo Team
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The practice of a healthcare profession exposes practitioners daily to considerable legal and financial risks. A simple diagnostic error, a poorly executed technical gesture or a failure to inform can engage the professional's liability and lead to compensation of several million euros. Professional civil liability insurance (PRC) thus constitutes the healthcare professional's first defence against the hazards of their activity.
A compulsory legal obligation
Since the Kouchner Law of 4 March 2002 on patients' rights and the quality of the healthcare system, all healthcare professionals working in private practice are required to take out professional civil liability insurance. This requirement is codified in article L.1142-2 of the Public Health Code.
Those concerned include: general practitioners and specialists, dentists, midwives, nurses, physiotherapists, speech therapists, chiropodists, osteopaths, as well as private healthcare establishments. Failure to insure is penalised by a fine of 45,000 euros and a ban on practising.
Essential guarantees of the healthcare PRC contract
A well-structured professional civil liability contract for healthcare should cover several areas:
Operating civil liability covers damage caused in the course of daily activity: a patient falling in the waiting room, deterioration of property entrusted, an incident relating to the premises.
Medical professional civil liability compensates for damages resulting directly from acts of care: diagnostic error, technical fault, failure to inform the patient, nosocomial infection in certain cases.
Legal protection covers defence costs in the event of proceedings before civil, criminal or professional courts, as well as before the Conciliation and Compensation Commission (CCC).
The minimum guarantee amounts are set by decree no. 2011-2030 of 29 December 2011: 8 million euros per claim and 15 million euros per year of insurance for high-risk medical professions.
Factors influencing insurance premium cost
The cost of PRC varies considerably according to several parameters: the specialty practised (an obstetric surgeon will pay far more than a general practitioner), turnover, seniority, past claims history, and the level of excess chosen. Gynaecologists-obstetricians and orthopaedic surgeons are among the most exposed, with annual premiums potentially exceeding 25,000 euros.
Claims reporting: best practices
In the event of a patient complaint, the professional must report the claim to their insurer within five working days in accordance with article L.113-2 of the Insurance Code. Care should be taken never to acknowledge responsibility directly to the patient and to quickly transmit the entire medical file, correspondence received and any factual information useful for analysis.
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