-
Clay shrinkage cracks: financial help for homeowners in high-risk French regions
10 million homes may suffer from damage
-
Quick look: sentences for Sarkozy and allies in 2007 campaign funding case
The former president is to spend five years in prison due to illegal financing with funds linked to Colonel Gaddafi’s Libya
-
French councils hold on taxe foncière rises but more apply second home surtax
Local authorities thought to be minimising extra revenue in the run-up to elections
Codeine now restricted to prescription-only
The Health Minister Agnès Buzyn announced that from today drugs containing codeine will only be available with a prescription

Codeine is a potentially addictive substance related to opium and commonly found in painkillers. It amplifies the effect of medications such as paracetamol, asprin and ibuprofen.
Until now, pills containing less than 30mg of codeine were readily available over-the-counter. But many of these combination drugs will now only be available with a prescription. The Health Minister said the restriction was put in place to “end life-threatening addictions”.
The Health Minister references an increasingly popular cocktail, commonly named ‘Purple Drank’, as a cause of rising codeine addiction among young people. The drink consists of a codeine-base cough syrup mixed with a soft drink.
The ‘Purple Drank’ phenomenon was highlighted in a report by the French Observatory for Drugs. “The number of people taking drugs containing codeine has risen in the last ten years across all age groups. Since 2013, an alarming number of adolescents and young people have been using these drugs. We will be releasing figures related to ‘Purple Drank’ soon.”
Two teenagers died earlier this year due to the effects of ‘Purple Drank’, and 30 'serious cases' were reported in people under 25.
Australia has put in place a similar codeine restriction which will be effective from 2018.
Stay informed:
Sign up to our free weekly e-newsletter
Subscribe to access all our online articles and receive our printed monthly newspaper The Connexion at your home. News analysis, features and practical help for English-speakers in France