-
Strepsils, Olbas Oil, TCP: Find French equivalents to common remedies
Moving to France means navigating pharmacies and hunting down alternatives to treat everyday ailments
-
I had cataract surgery in France
After her vision deteriorated in one eye, Finistère resident Ann Edwards, 80, had to go into hospital for an cataract operation. Here, she talks about the procedure and post-op check-ups
-
How France’s new free health checks work
People in four key age groups are eligible and the 30-45 minute checks are designed to offer better preventative care
Five things they don’t tell you about… French attitudes to healthcare
We take a sideways look at how healthcare is viewed in France - which may be a little different to your native country
1. Le problème
Bragging about ongoing minor health issues, such as a fragile nose, heavy legs, or a tendency to feel dizzy when hungry, gets you more kudos than stoically suffering in silence.
Get extra Brownie points if your doctors have warned you not to sneeze too hard in case you break your coccyx (someone really did tell me this!). Je te jure!
2. Le docteur
Medical bragging extends to implying you have an entire team of medics at your disposal.
You never go to ‘the doctor’, you consult mon médecin or généraliste or mon toubib for colds and coughs.
For everything else, it is mon spécialiste or, in extremis, mon chirurgien. Ma chère!
Read more: Can you consult a medical specialist without seeing your GP in France?
Read more: France needs up to 15,000 pharmacists to fill gaps, unions say
3. Le pharmacie
Talk to mon pharmacien about which tisane will help you lose weight from your stomach but not your face, and which pills will aid your fragile digestion without keeping you awake at night, even if you only buy aspirin in the end.
Vous avez bien fait!
Read more: French pharmacists offer medical consultations in new trial
4. Le kiné
If nothing else is working, you could end up at mon kiné, who may tape you up with multicoloured sticking plaster, cup or magnetise you, or hook you up for a mild electrical buzz.
But you score gold points for being taken by ambulance to an all-day kiné with exercise machines and lunch. T’imagines?
5. Le rétablissement
Eventually, you will start feeling better and les choses will rentre dans l’ordre, but only if you stay off work for long enough.
During this period you may well need clear soup, but no flowers because of the aforementioned danger of sneezing too hard. Il faut être prudent!
Related articles
Five things they don’t tell you about entertaining in France
Carpets, shutters: five things they don't tell you about French houses
Ten French film titles that differ (widely) from English originals