A new CPTS in Haut Val-de-Marne
Val d’Avenir, such is the name of the new Professional Territorial Health Community (CPTS) which brings together health professionals from Villiers-sur-Marne, Plessis-Trévise and La Tail-en-Brie. As a reminder, CPTS aim to work together doctors, health establishments and paramedical professions who wish to improve access to the care of residents and work on local public health issues. For this, the CPTS benefit from funding to have a person to animate the community and implement actions. In Val-de-Marne, 11 CPTS have already emerged.
The CPTS Val d’Avenir, which covers a population of 63,000 inhabitants in the three cities, to date federates around fifty health professionals. Its first objectives mainly concern access to care, namely the allocation of a treating doctor for the most fragile, the organization of care for unscheduled care, coordination between actors to ensure the continuity of care of certain pathologies, and incentive to the installation of new doctors on the territory by welcoming trainees and working on their quality of life. Because, as in many sectors of the department, the medical population is aging. “31, 25 % of general practitioners and 53 %
Doctors specialists are over 60 years old ”, CPTS figure in a press release. On the other hand, the territory can rely on collective structures such as a multi-professional health center in Plessis-Trévise, and a Sport Health house in Villiers-sur-Marne (as with the city of Bry).
On the prevention side, the new CPTS intends to work in particular on the screening of cancers and diabetes, vaccination, and the encouragement of physical activity. The diagnosis carried out upstream of the creation of the community has indeed revealed a “Prevalence of pathologies such as diabetes,
cancers, psychiatry and heart or coronary diseases ”, Note the CPTS. The diagnosis also notes that the population is relatively young but that the share of over 75s increases. Part of the inhabitants are also in precarious situations, especially in Villiers-sur-Marne which has an important priority political district of the city (QPV).
Signed at the end of June with the Regional Health Agency and Health Insurance, the CPTS will be led by three co-presidents, Aurore Tchao, general practitioner in Plessis-Trévise, Borivan Bien, general practitioner in Villiers-sur-Marne and Lucie Martin, pharmacist in La Cour-en-Brie.
This vertical health is published one Thursday in two, excluding school holidays and holidays. If you wish to share information or an initiative concerning health in Val-de-Marne, do not hesitate by contacting us at [email protected].
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A secure paper form for work stoppages
The fraud to daily allowances reached € 42 million in 2024 (against € 17 million in 2023), in particular via false work stoppages sold online. To answer it, health insurance has imposed a secure paper CERFA form with 7 authentication points since July 1ᵉʳ 2025. A tolerance is scheduled until August 31. From September, any unsecured form will be rejected. Scans and photocopies are prohibited and considered false.
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Updating the panorama of socio-health profiles in cities shows the evolution of medical demography
The Regional Health Observatory (ORS) has updated the socio-health profiles of the municipalities. A wealth of information on the socio-economic context of cities, the situation of young people and elderly, disabled, exposure to environmental nuisances, life expectancy, access to care …
In terms of access to care, the profiles testify in particular to the evolution of the density of health professionals for 10,000 inhabitants, per municipality, from 2015 to 2022. The opportunity to note that, in Val-de-Marne, the density of liberal general practitioners (excluding health centers) installed by commune has decreased in 31 cities out of 47. It has however increased in 14 cities. Two remained identically. Beyond the evolution, the figures show the disparity of the density from one municipality to another, ranging from 3.4 per 10,000 to 12.2 per 10,000.
See the table below:
Number of general practitioners (excluding health centers) installed by city for 10,000 inhabitants
Ville | 2015 density | Density 2022 | Difference |
Saint-Maur-des-Fossés | 11,4 | 12,2 | 7,02% |
Bry-sur-Marne | 10,2 | 11,4 | 11,76% |
PERIGNY-SUR-YERES | 11,5 | 11,1 | -3,48% |
Mandres-les-Roses | 6,7 | 8,4 | 25,37% |
Sucy-en-Brie | 6,1 | 8,1 | 32,79% |
Vincennes | 8,9 | 8 | -10,11% |
Charenton-le-Pont | 9,4 | 7,8 | -17,02% |
Saint-Mandé | 7,6 | 7,7 | 1,32% |
Maisons-Alfort | 7,3 | 7,5 | 2,74% |
Anpt | 5,5 | 7,5 | 36,36% |
Orly | 5,2 | 7,4 | 42,31% |
Joinville-le-Pont | 8 | 7,3 | -8,75% |
Créteil | 8,2 | 7,2 | -12,20% |
Rungis | 8,9 | 7,1 | -20,22% |
Nogent-sur-Marne | 8,6 | 7,1 | -17,44% |
Villecresnes | 8,3 | 6,8 | -18,07% |
Le Perreux-sur-Marne | 7,7 | 6,8 | -11,69% |
The Plessis-Trévise | 9 | 6,6 | -26,67% |
Ormesson-sur-Marne | 6,9 | 6,6 | -4,35% |
Saint-Maurice | 5,5 | 6,2 | 12,73% |
Vitry-sur-Seine | 7,1 | 5,9 | -16,90% |
The tail-in-brie | 6,7 | 5,8 | -13,43% |
Boissy-Saint-Léger | 6,3 | 5,8 | -7,94% |
Champigny-sur-Marne | 8 | 5,7 | -28,75% |
The Kremlin-Bicêtre | 5,1 | 5,7 | 11,76% |
Fontenay-sous-Bois | 6,2 | 5,3 | -14,52% |
Fresnes | 5,9 | 5,3 | -10,17% |
Alfortville | 5,2 | 5,3 | 1,92% |
Chennevières-sur-Marne | 5,5 | 5 | -9,09% |
Villeneuve-Saint-Georges | 5,5 | 4,9 | -10,91% |
Bonneuil-sur-Marne | 5,3 | 4,9 | -7,55% |
Valenton | 6,9 | 4,8 | -30,43% |
Villeneuve-le-Roi | 5,3 | 4,7 | -11,32% |
Thiais | 6,2 | 4,5 | -27,42% |
Ivry-sur-Seine | 5,5 | 4,4 | -20,00% |
Chevilly-Larue | 3,7 | 4,4 | 18,92% |
Gentilly | 7,1 | 4,3 | -39,44% |
Hazard | 4,2 | 4,3 | 2,38% |
Marolles-en-Brie | 4,2 | 4,2 | 0,00% |
Choisy-le-Roi | 6,2 | 4,1 | -33,87% |
Villejuif | 6,2 | 4,1 | -33,87% |
Arcueil | 5,6 | 4,1 | -26,79% |
Cachan | 3,9 | 4 | 2,56% |
Limeil-Brévannes | 3,9 | 3,9 | 0,00% |
L’Haÿ-les-Roses | 4,6 | 3,8 | -17,39% |
Villiers-sur-Marne | 5,6 | 3,4 | -39,29% |
Ablon-sur-Seine | 3,6 | 3,4 | -5,56% |
Prevent the proliferation of tiger mosquito
Vector of sympathetic illnesses like dengue, chikungunya, or zika, the tiger mosquito has already “Colonized” 212 municipalities in Ile-de-France, representing 68% of the population, alerts the Regional Health Agency. For the time being, almost all of the 584 cases of diseases noted in the region concerned people who returned from vacation. A case of indigenous chikungunya, contracted locally, has however been identified, which confirmed “That the threat was no longer only theoretical”, insists the ARS. As early as 2023, a family cluster of three cases of dengue not having traveled, had also been detected in Val-de-Marne, recalls the ARS.
In this context, vigilance is reinforced between May 1 and November 30, which passes, beyond prevention, through a neutralization of mosquitoes near the dwellings of each case of dengue, Chikungunya or Zika reported. Demoustication operations are also organized, when there is a risk of transmission of one of these diseases.
Empty all containers
With regard to basic prevention, within the reach of each inhabitant, it is simply recommended to empty all the containers who drag in its garden or balcony, likely to contain standing water, to cover water recovery and to clean the gutters, to avoid the proliferation of mosquitoes. “The tiger mosquito prospered easily in the urban environment, it only takes a flower pot to proliferate”, ARS alert.
A tiger mosquito report platform is also available online.
A therapeutic garden at the inter -municipal hospital in Créteil
A therapeutic garden for patients in medical care, functional rehabilitation and acute geriatrics, such is the project that the care teams of the Créteil Intercommunal Hospital Center (chic) are carrying out to meet the needs of elderly patients, often suffering from multiple pathologies and suffering from disabilities aggravated by hospitalization. The garden, deployed on 150 m2, was inaugurated at the end of June.
It offers several spaces: sensory route, cognitive zone (activity panels), motor skills area (walking, balance, grip), area of conviviality and rest area. Intergenerational workshops, physical activities, animal mediation sessions and shows will be organized. The objectives are sensory and cognitive stimulation, the improvement of autonomy, mood and social ties, including with hospitalized children.
The investment of 42,650 euros was supported up to 24,260 euros by the Fund for the endowment of Confluence hospitals, 6,000 euros by the City of Créteil and 2,000 euros from the Georges Truffaut Foundation.