As of April 2024, eight Member States have taken legal measures to counter financial discrimination against cancer survivors. France was the first to act on the matter and passed a law on the Right to be Forgotten for cancer survivors in January 2016, Belgium followed suit in March 2018. From January 2021, the Netherlands adopted the ‘clean-slate policy’, implementing the Right to be Forgotten, with the Portuguese policymakers adopting the law in January 2022. Romania passed a similar law in July 2022, making it a pioneering country in the CEE region. The most recent EU countries which adopted the law are Spain (July 2023), Cyprus (November 2023) and Italy (December 2023).
Adopted legislative pieces vary depending on the implementing country, rendering it challenging to develop an EU-wide definition of the right to be forgotten. The common point, however, remains the same: to protect cancer survivors against financial discrimination, after a specific period has passed.
For individuals who were diagnosed with cancer as adults, the situation is as follows: adults’ medical history would be forgotten after 10 years (the Netherlands, Portugal, Italy, Cyprus), 8 years (Belgium), 7 years (Romania) or 5 years (France and Spain) and without any evidence of relapse or recurrence.
Special conditions were developed in some countries for young people, offering shorter delays. In Romania, if cancer was diagnosed before the age of 18, the right to be forgotten would apply from 5 years after the end of treatment. In Belgium, the Netherlands, Portugal and Cyprus, a similar shorter period applies for a diagnosis before the age of 21.
In addition, France, Belgium and the Netherlands have developed reference grids that provide specific conditions for non-invasive cancers, shortening the time between the end of treatment and the application of the right to be forgotten. These lists include specific conditions and shorter delays for cancers with an excellent prognosis. These lists of exceptions are reviewed either annually or every 2 years according to medical progress and statistics (mortality rate).
Some countries foresee maximum amounts that can be borrowed for cancer survivors to benefit from the law. In the Netherlands for example, mortgages cannot exceed 278.004€ (adjusted once every three years) per person, while there is no limit in Belgium.
Belgium is the only country with a legal framework in place where cancer survivors are obligated to communicate their cancer history for all insurance (in France, Spain, Romania, the Netherlands and Portugal, cancer survivors have the right not to disclose it when applying for life insurance). In France, the situation has evolved through the years, and now cancer survivors are exempt from notifying their cancer history in medical questionnaires after the five-year recovery period for the insurance contracts occurring before the borrower’s 71st birthday, and for any loan with a maximum amount of 200,000€ per person and when the loan matures before the loaner’s 60th birthday, medical questionnaires are abandoned.
Other countries have adopted non-legislative frameworks which take the form of Conventions between the government and insurers (Luxembourg) and self-regulatory codes of conduct (Ireland, Denmark, Czechia).
Click on the map below to find more information about existing provisions throughout the EU.
No initiatives.
Belgium introduced the Right to be Forgotten legislation in April 2019, which came into effect in February 2020. Under the current law, discrimination based on a cancer diagnosis is prohibited after a period of 8 years (and 5 years for when cancer was diagnosed before the age of 21), a duration set to be reduced to 5 years in January 2025. Additionally, the Belgian law includes a reference grid, which foresees shorter durations for specific cancer types. In 2022 a law was introduced, extending the application of the Right to be Forgotten to guarantee income disability insurance for people cured of cancer. It is notable that in Belgium, cancer survivors are obligated to disclose their cancer history.
Legal background and timeline
The law introducing the right to be forgotten in Belgium (Legal Ref.: Law no. C − 2019/40839, 4 April 2019) was promulgated in April 2019.
The law entered into force in February 2020.
On 26 May 2019 a Royal Decree complemented the law with a Reference Table (Doc. No. C − 2019/12990) which determines a reduced term to apply the Right to be Forgotten for specific types of cancers. The reference table entered into force as of 1 April 2020 (subsequently revised – see below).
On 27 October 2022, the Belgian Parliament adopted a law (Law no. C − 2022/34022) aimed at broadening the Law of 4 April 2019 on the right to be forgotten in the context of insurance.
In June 2023, the Minister of Health and Social Affairs and the Minister of Economy and Employment advocated for a “faster” right to be forgotten for breast cancer survivors
Research and Assessment
Exemptions & Specifics
Type of Cancer
For specific cancer diseases, such as breast cancer, there is a reduced term applicable, which can be found in the reference table (pp. 12-17; latest version dated 17-07-2023).
Other diseases
Under the Belgian Regulation, the Right to be Forgotten is also applicable to other diseases such as:
Limitation
The Belgian regulation does not provide a limitation for the amount covered by insurance repayment contracts.
Additional information
No initiatives.
No initiatives.
Overview of Cyprus
More information
Overview of Czechia
More information
Overview of Denmark
More information
No initiatives.
No initiatives.
Overview of France
More information
No initiatives.
In discussion.
No initiatives.
Overview of Ireland
More information
Legislation adopted in 2023
On December 5, 2023, the Italian Senate unanimously approved the right to be forgotten for cancer patients with 139 votes in favor. The initiative began in August 2023 when the Chamber of Deputies granted its initial approval.
The new law stipulates that individuals who have successfully completed cancer treatment and have been in remission for over ten years are now exempt from disclosing their cancer history when obtaining insurance, applying for a mortgage, or pursuing adoption. The same applies to paediatric cancer survivors after five years from the end of treatment.
The law was published in the Official Journal on 18 December 2023, and will be in force starting from 2 January 2024.
No initiatives.
No initiatives.
Overview of Luxembourg
More information
Overview of Malta
More information
Overview of Netherlands
More information
No initiatives.
Overview of Portugal
More information
Overview of Romania
More information
No initiatives.
In discussion.
The law consecrating the Right to be Forgotten in Spain entered into force on 28 June 2023. Under the current law, this right comes into effect after five years of completing treatment without relapse. While Spain approved the RTBF law almost a year ago, the legislation is yet to be implemented due to the lack of allocated resources and implementation efforts.
Legal background and timeline
On 28 June 2023 a Royal Decree (Real Decreto-ley 5/2023) entered into force, introducing the Right to be Forgotten in Spain. It is introduced as a modification of Article 10 of Law 50/1989 on Insurance Contracts and represents the Fifth additional provision: Non-discrimination on the basis of HIV/AIDS, cancer or other health conditions.
Under this Fifth provision, the Law on Insurance Contracts is modified to read as follows:
On 23 February 2024, members of the Partido Popular in Spain submitted a parliamentary question (PQ) regarding the implementation status of the RTBF, specifically if the Spanish government is planning to promote, lead or coordinate measures of real utility given.
In their response, the government stated that the government, through the Ministry of Health, is contributing to the development of the European Code of Conduct (CoC) aimed at assisting Member States in facilitating access to financial products for cancer survivors. This suggests that the Spanish government is awaiting directions from the EU.
Research and Assessment
Exemptions & Specifics
Type of Cancer
The Spanish law does not include specific provisions for the different types of cancer.
Other diseases
Under the Spanish Regulation, the Right to be Forgotten is also applicable to HIV / AIDS.
Childhood cancer survivors
In Spain there is no specific time period for childhood cancer survivors.
Limitation
The Spanish regulation does not provide a limitation for the amount covered by insurance repayment contracts.
Additional information
Fundación Josep Carreras contra la Leucemia published a comprehensive report on the effect of Leukemia on young people, detailing the societal impact of the disease which includes financial discrimination. Find the report here.
No initiatives.
Legal Ref: Code of conduct.
Denmark has implemented self-regulatory policies that provide options for persons with a history of cancer to access financial products under certain circumstances.
Insurance companies offer life insurance to individuals who have a previous history of cancer, subject to specific conditions such as the type of cancer and the duration since being cured. As part of these policies, insurers have voluntarily agreed to disregard prior cancer diagnoses after a certain period, and under certain circumstances.
Cancer survivors who have completed their treatment and remained cancer-free for a period ranging from 2 to 5 years become eligible for insurance coverage, albeit at higher premiums and typically limited to cancers with a higher likelihood of successful treatment. However, once an individual is considered cured with no evidence of disease or relapse, obtaining coverage becomes easier. The acceptance of insurance applications from cancer survivors is determined through a risk assessment process, and it should be noted that premiums for individuals with a cancer history may be higher compared to those without a history of cancer.
The proposal for a Law on the legislative establishment of the Right to Be Forgotten for citizens with a cancer history was unanimously approved by the Cyprus Parliament on 23 November 2023.
The approved law states that no insurance company will be able to reject an application by a cancer survivor if 10 years have passed since the completion of their treatment; or 5 years have passed if this person has been diagnosed with cancer before the age of twenty-one.(REF)
On November 2023 a Code of Conduct was officially endorsed by the Czech Health Ministry, patient organisations and insurance companies.
A Code of Conduct on the Right to be forgotten implies insurers’ voluntary commitment rather than legal obligations to protect cancer survivors against financial discrimination. This self-regulation standard will be established by the Czech Insurance Association (CAP), representing over 98% of the Czech insurance sector.
Legal Ref.: Articles L. 1141-5 and L. 1141-6 French Public Health Code; Law no. 2016-41, 26 January 2016 – art. 190 (V);
AERAS Convention (September 2023).
The Right to be forgotten has been endorsed as a legal provision in France in 2016, as part of the Law on the modernisation of the National Health System (Law no. 2016-41, 26 January 2016).
Thanks to the reform, France endorsed the art. 190, now Article L1141-5. The rule states that in the context of insurance or loan contracts, the period beyond which no medical information relating to cancerous pathologies can be collected by insurer organisms may not exceed ten years after the date of the end of the treatment or, for cancerous pathologies occurring before age twenty-one, five years from the end of the therapeutic protocol.
The content of the provision needs to be integrated by the standards in the AERAS Convention and the other norms in the French Public Health Code (as L. 1141-2).
The AERAS Convention (S’Assurer et Emprunter avec un Risque Aggravé de Santé/Insuring and Loaning with Aggravated Health Risk) represents a national agreement between the State, the professional organizations representing the credit institutions, the finance companies, insurance companies, social security and provident institutions as well as patients national organizations. The Convention aims to facilitate access to insurance and loaning for people presenting an aggravated risk due to their state of health or handicap. It ensures that credit institutions and finance companies take full account of alternative guarantees to insurance, defining also procedures for informing applicants, investigating their files and mediating.
The Convention applies, under certain conditions, to consumers, real estate and professional loan insurance.
A monitoring committee ensures the application of the Convention and respect for the commitments of the parties. Alongside this organism, it has been established also a Committee for studies and researches, responsible for collecting and studying the available data on mortality and morbidity caused by the main pathologies. A mediation committee is in charge of the examination of the individual complaints by applicants.
At the beginning of 2017, France adopted a new decree (Decree 2017-147 of 7 February 2017) to implement the obligation of information for insurers. By law, the insurer is responsible for giving an “information document on the Right to be forgotten” to applicants for credit repayment insurance, at the same time as the normal risk declaration form.
The provision has been further enforced by Decree no. 2017-173 of 13 February 2017, which relates to the penalties applicable to any insurers that do not conform to the legal time limit for the collection of medical information.
Recently, the new law n°2022-270 of 02/28/2022 (Loi Lemoine) “for a fairer, simpler and more transparent access to the borrower insurance market” significantly reformed the provision. The latter established the abolition of the medical questionnaire for mortgages of an amount less than 200,000.00 euros per person and which end before the 60th birthday of the borrower. These loans must also relate to the acquisition of property for residential use or for mixed residential/professional use.
For other loans that do not meet the conditions referred to above, the law strengthened the right to be forgotten by lowering to 5 years instead of 10 years (from the end of the therapeutic protocol and without relapse) the period after which no medical information relating to cancerous pathologies or Hepatitis C can be requested by insurers.
In this case also, the Convention can be applicable with shorter terms adapted for specific cancer diseases. In this regard, former cancer patients who have suffered from a pathology that falls within the framework of the reference grid can obtain an insurance contract under standard conditions after a time adapted to each pathology from the end of the therapeutic protocol. Although in these circumstances, for them exist the obligation to declare the diseases, and the insurance amount cannot exceed €420,000.00. According to the law, the diseases, and the corresponding time frames for the applicability of the provision are regularly updated by the monitoring committee, in line with advances in treatments and scientific data. The annual report of the monitoring committee is publicly available on the website of the AERAS convention.
No initiatives.
On April 15, 2024, the Ministry of Finance, the Association of Insurance Companies of Greece (EAEE) and the Hellenic Cancer Federation (ELOK) presented the Code of Conduct for the safeguarding of the right to be forgotten (RTBF) of cancer survivors in the life contracts associated with any kind of loan.
With the support of the Ministry of Finance, the Greek insurance market, recognizing the legitimate interest of cancer survivors to have access to high-socially socially important financial services, adopted a Code of Conduct for the safeguarding of the right to be forgotten (RTBF).
The Code of Conduct of EAEE is a text of self-registration of insurance companies, which was co-formulated with the Ministry of Finance and ELOK and concerns, in particular, the safeguarding of the right to be forgotten in the context of life insurance related to each type of loan either housing, professional or consumer, up to the total amount of € 300,000.
The enshrinment of this right means that insurance companies will not use the history of a candidate’s cancer patient after 10 years after completion of treatment and full treatment from the disease. This period decreases to 5 years, if the diagnosis of cancer was made before adulthood. At its core it is a right to non-differentiate a former cancer patient to any other person with a similar risk profile, free from the disease.
The EAEE member companies, which exercise life insurance, joined the Code, signaling in practice the commitment of the industry.
On December 2023, the Italian Senate unanimously approved the right to be forgotten for cancer patients. The law stipulates that individuals who have successfully completed cancer treatment and have been in remission for over ten years are now exempt from disclosing their cancer history when obtaining insurance, applying for a mortgage, or pursuing adoption. The same applies to paediatric cancer survivors after five years from the end of treatment.
The law was published in the Official Journal on 18 December 2023, and will be in force starting from 2 January 2024.
On 24 April 2024, the Italian government published the 22 March 2024 Decree regarding the reference grid for specific types of cancers including colorectal, melanoma, leukaemia, uterine, breast, testicular, hodgkin lymphoma and tyroid cancers, to which expedited terms apply. This list of grids of exceptions will undergo periodic updates, scheduled annually by 31 December.
In Ireland, a new code of practice is set to enhance the underwriting process for mortgage protection insurance for cancer survivors starting in December. The code, which was announced in June 2023, introduces significant changes for insurers and cancer survivors.
One of the key provisions is that a cancer diagnosis will no longer impact the application if the treatment concluded over seven years prior to the submission. For individuals diagnosed with cancer before turning 18, this waiting period will be reduced to five years.
Under this new code, mortgage applicants who are cancer survivors can receive coverage up to €500,000 for their primary residence.
This initiative was developed by Insurance Ireland in collaboration with the Irish Cancer Society, as they recognized the difficulty many cancer survivors face in obtaining the necessary life cover to secure a home.
It’s worth noting that this code complements an existing exemption in the Consumer Credit Act of 1995, which allows lenders to apply specific conditions under certain circumstances.
Since the 1st January 2020, Luxembourg has introduced the “Right to be forgotten” to facilitate access to payment protection insurance for cancer survivors.
The initiative has been formalised through a Convention between Luxembourg’s Ministry of Health, the Luxembourg Insurance and Reinsurance Association (ACA) and eight insurance companies.
The Convention applies only and exclusively to the balance outstanding insurance for a loan or estate loan to acquire the main residence or professional facilities. For the same person concerned, it applies only within the limit of the maximum amount of €1,000,000.
The Convention does not apply to the acquisition of a second home or rental investments.
According to the provisions, the applicant cured of cancer is entitled not to declare his pathology when the therapeutic protocol for cancer has ended for 10 years (end of active treatment of cancer by surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy); or for 5 years, for cancer diagnosed before the age of 18.
During the mentioned timeframe, the absence of relapse is a requirement.
This Convention also includes a “list of exceptions” for specific cancer diseases corresponding to shorter terms for the application of the Right to be forgotten. In this regard, it exists an obligation to declare the disease and the protection from being charged with extra premium.
The system includes the establishment of a monitoring committee. This body is made by experts, with the power to examine individual complaints from rejected applicants, and ensure the respect of the provisions.
The Netherlands approved a set of rules to protect the privacy of consumers and limit insurers to ask about a person’s illness history for a certain period after someone is cancer-free. The rule applies to life insurance policies for applicants before the age of 71, and to funeral insurance policies that are entered into or concluded before the person to whose life the insurance relates reaches the age of 61.
Article 2 of the Decree states that the question of whether cancer has been diagnosed in the past in a candidate may represent the risk of disproportionate violation of privacy within the meaning of Article 3, first paragraph, of the Medical Examinations Act. For that reason, ensuring the balance between the different interests of parties, the decree rules that it is no longer allowed to ask whether someone has had cancer in the past when, according to the opinion of the care provider who treated the candidate, there was complete remission, and calculated from the moment when complete remission within the meaning of part a is established, no recurrence of cancer has been diagnosed for an uninterrupted period of ten years.
According to the explanatory memorandum of the Decree, if an insurer nevertheless asks these questions, Article 11 stipulates that the examiner has the right to refuse to cooperate. In concrete terms, this means that a former cancer patient does not have to provide information about this illness history if a life insurance company or funeral insurance company asks for it in violation of this decision. The applicant can submit any disputes about this to the Financial Services Complaints Institute.
In case, the insurance company may already be aware that its client has undergone cancer treatment, it may not include this information in its decision on an application to take out a new insurance policy or to change an existing insurance policy. The data may also not be used when setting the premium. Coverage limits are set at EUR 278,004, subject to adjustments based on the consumer price index every three years.
The norm establishes also that if the candidate is younger than 21 at the time the cancer was diagnosed, the term referred to in the first paragraph of this article is five years.
A further derogation concerns the application of shorter periods after which a candidate may no longer be asked whether he has suffered from a certain form of cancer in the past for forms of cancer for which, according to generally accepted medical insights and actuarial and statistical data, the chance of that cancer returning after a short period is so small that the prudential interest of the insurer is no longer compelling enough to still go to that form of cancer to ask. In this regard, agreements have been made between representative organizations of patients and insurers about the time limits to be used with regard to that form of cancer.
The Decree on insurance examinations for cancer survivors entered into force on 1 January 2021.
Legal Ref.: Projeto de Lei 691/XIV/2 Reforça a proteção da pessoa segurada, proibindo práticas discriminatórias, melhorando o acesso ao crédito e contratos de seguros por pessoas que tenham superado riscos agravados de saúde, consagrando o “direito ao esquecimento”
The Law 691/XIV/2.ª Strengthens the protection of insured persons by prohibiting discriminatory practices, improving access to credit and insurance contracts for people who have overcome aggravated health risks, enshrining the ‘right to be forgotten was adopted by the Portuguese Parliament on 22 October 2021 and promulgated by the President of the Republic on 11 November 2021. The text amends the Law nr. 46/2006 and the legal regime of the insurance contract.
In article 2, the text establishes the Right to be forgotten for people who have overcome or mitigated situations of aggravated health risk or disability when contracting housing credit and consumer credit, as well as when contracting compulsory or optional insurance associated with such credit. The law ensures that this group of people cannot be subject to an increase in insurance premium and/or exclusion of insurance contract guarantees and that, no health information regarding the medical condition giving rise to the aggravated health risk or disability may be collected or processed by credit institutions or insurers in a pre-contractual context. There are no defined maximum coverage amounts.
The Law provides three different timelines, after which no health information regarding aggravated health risk or disability may be collected by credit institutions or insurers:
a) Ten years from the end of the therapeutic protocol, in the case of aggravated health risk or overcome disability; or
b) Five years since the end of the therapeutic protocol, in case the disease occurred before twenty-one years of age.
c) Two years of ongoing effective therapeutic protocol in the case of aggravated health risk or mitigated disability.
In article 3, the text points out that persons at aggravated health risk” means persons suffering from any pathology which determines a long-term, evolving, potentially incapacitating, organic or functional alteration that alters the bearer’s quality of life at a physical, mental, emotional, social and economic level and is a potential cause of early disability or a significant reduction in life expectancy”. Moreover, in article 6 it states that “Persons who have overcome disability” means persons who can be shown to have been 60% or more disabled and who have recovered their psychological, intellectual, physiological or anatomical structures or functions, reducing their disability below this threshold. Besides, “Persons who have mitigated situations of aggravated health risk or disability” defines who are undergoing treatment proven to significantly and durably limit the effects of their aggravated health risk or disability situation.
Further details on the legal disposal need to be clarified, as for the reference table. An agreement shall define a procedure for the establishment of the grid that allows the terms and deadlines referred for each pathology or disability, in line with therapeutic progress, scientific data and knowledge of the health, credit or insurance risk that each pathology or disability represents. The reference table shall be updated every two years and shall be public.
The Portuguese law entered into force on 1 January 2022.
Legal Ref.: PL-x nr. 282/2022
Proiect de Lege pentru completarea Legii drepturilor pacientului nr.46/2003
Since July 2022, Romania implemented the Right to be forgotten for cancer survivors amending the law no. 46/2003.
According to the new provision, for insurance contracts, in case the distributor of insurance requires cancer survivors information and documents in order to assess the risk for insurance, the survivor has the right not to supply the documents referring to their oncological condition, if a period of 7 years has passed since the date of conclusion of the oncological protocol. For cancer survivor whose diagnosis has been made before the age of 18, the term is 5 years by the end of the oncological treatment.
The insurance distributors have the obligation to mention the right provided clearly, concisely, easily understandable and visible in the same visual field and with characters of the same size in the documents it requests information and documents for risk assessment, under the penalty of relative invalidity of the insurance contract. Moreover, in order to ensure the right to be forgotten, doctors have the obligation not to provide insurance distributors any information and documents.
As for the other EU national laws, the text sets out the possibility of shorter deadlines by age categories and types of oncological diseases of the cancer survivors based on scientific data regarding therapeutic advances.
In January 2022, Romania also adopted Law no.18/22 declaring the first Sunday of June as National Cancer Survivors Day. It aims to raising awareness and informing citizens about the challenges and solutions regarding improving the quality and increasing the life span of cancer survivors are organized at the national and local level.
The law also provides a definition of cancer survivors as people who no longer have the disease after the end of treatment, people who continue to receive treatment to reduce the risk of cancer recurrence and people who have the disease under control, have few symptoms and who receive treatment to manage cancer as a chronic disease.
References: Legislative Proposal.
After years of pressure from patient organisations, the Ministry of Minister is currently working on a law proposal modelled after existing legislation in other countries.
The law is highly anticipated
Sweden doesn’t have any specific legislation or a code of conduct related to the Right to be Forgotten.
However, some insurances companies in Sweden offer cancer insurances designed to provide financial assistance for treatment when cancer is diagnosed. It is important to note that this coverage must be obtained before a cancer diagnosis.
References: Cancer insurer and Cancer insurer.
The Swedish Government also provides a sickness benefit for individuals who are sick for longer than 2 weeks and aren’t able to work.
References: Sickness benefit by Swedish government.