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Lapsen terveys

Children’s health

Published16.12.2024
Finland has comprehensive and high-quality health services for children. Public health services, such as child health clinics and school health care, are affordable or free of charge. There are also many private health services on offer.

If your child has a municipality of residence in Finland, they are entitled to public health services. Children sometimes have the right to use the services even without a municipality of residence. For example, asylum seekers under 18 years of age are entitled to the services.

You can find more information on municipality of residence on the InfoFinland page Municipality of residence in Finland. You can find more information about the right to medical care on the InfoFinland page Health services in Finland.

If you are covered by Finnish national health insurance (sairausvakuutus), you can take out an insurance policy for your child, which covers some of the costs of private health care. This can sometimes speed up access to treatment, for example in the evening and at weekends.

When a child falls ill

A feverish child or an otherwise ill child cannot be taken to day care. When a child under 10 years of age suddenly falls ill, the child’s mother or father can stay at home to take care of the child. This type of temporary child care leave can last for up to four days. The collective agreement states whether or not salary will be paid for this period.

A child who falls ill during a school day will receive care at school. If the child needs other treatment, the school will inform the parents.

If a child is ill and needs a doctor or a nurse, contact your local health and social services centre (sosiaali- ja terveyskeskus) or a private clinic. Health and social services centres are usually open from Monday to Friday from 8 am to 4 pm. It is best to call the health centre in the morning as soon as it opens for appointment booking. The person making the appointment will evaluate what kind of treatment the child needs.

Health and social services centres are closed in the evenings and at weekends. At those times, urgent illnesses and accidents are treated at the emergency clinic (päivystys). If your child’s illness does not require immediate treatment, wait until the health and social services centre opens again. Emergency services for children and the young are often arranged in a separate unit.

Different wellbeing services counties may use different names for health and social services centre, such as terveysasema, terveyskeskus or hyvinvointiasema.

You can also make a doctor’s appointment at a private clinic. These are often also open in the evenings, and sometimes you can get an appointment faster there. However, private health services are much more expensive for the client than public ones.

If you suspect that a child has ingested poison, you can ask the Poison Information Centre for advice. Its telephone service is available 24 hours a day. The telephone number is 0800 147 111.

If a child’s life is in danger or they have an accident, call the emergency number 112. Ambulances are meant only for serious and urgent situations. Do not call the emergency number in an ordinary case of illness.

You can find more information on the InfoFinland web page Emergencies.

Young children’s health

Child health clinics (lastenneuvola) usually tend to the health of children under school age. A child usually starts school in the year when they turn 7. These clinics monitor and support the physical, mental and social growth and development of young children. Children regularly visit a doctor or a nurse at a child health clinic.

The clinic’s nurse monitors children’s development, vaccinates them and provides information about healthy nutrition. The nurse also visits a child’s home soon after birth.

The public child health clinic services are free of charge. If you have a municipality of residence in Finland, you can use the child health clinic services in your own area. You can find more information on the InfoFinland web page Municipality of residence in Finland.

Children are given their personal child health clinic card at the clinic. Always take the card along when you visit a child health clinic. The nurse will enter your child’s health information and vaccinations on it. The child health clinic card can also be electronic.

When you move to Finland or from one municipality to another in Finland, you should contact the child health clinic of your new municipality of residence. This way you can ensure that your child receives an invitation to the clinic on time.

School-age children’s health

Every school has a doctor and a nurse assigned to it. The nurse checks the children’s health at school. The nurse is at the school on certain days of the week. Pupils can go and see the nurse themselves if they have a problem. If an accident occurs at school, the child involved will be given first aid. The website of the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health (Sosiaali- ja terveysministeriö) provides information about school health care.

Link redirects to another websiteMinistry of Social Affairs and Health

School health care

Vaccinations

In Finland, children are offered the possibility of vaccination (rokotus) against many infectious and contagious diseases. Vaccinations are given at child health clinics (lastenneuvola) and in schools. Vaccinations that are a part of a vaccination programme are free of charge to the parents. Vaccinations are voluntary. The majority of children in Finland are given the vaccinations included in vaccination programmes. Tell the nurse which vaccinations your child has been given before coming to Finland.

If you want your child to be given a vaccination that is not in the vaccination programme, make an appointment with a doctor. The doctor can write a prescription for the vaccination, and the nurse can vaccinate your child. You must buy the vaccination yourself from a pharmacy.

Link redirects to another websiteThe National Institute for Health and Welfare

Finland's vaccination programme

Children need vitamin D supplements in Finland

When children are growing, they need vitamin D. Vitamin D is important for good bone development. It is especially important in Finland because it is dark in winter. In Finland, children do not get enough vitamin D from sunlight and food.

Give your children aged 17 or younger daily vitamin D supplements all year round. Vitamin D supplements come in the form of drops or tablets. It is important to take the right amount of vitamin D – not too much and not too little. Ask the maternity and child health clinic about the right dose for your child.

Long-term illness or caring for a disabled child

You can apply for special child-care allowance if you have to participate in the care or rehabilitation of a seriously ill or disabled child under the age of 16 and, therefore, cannot work. As an alternative to the special child-care allowance, you may be entitled to rehabilitation allowance during your child’s rehabilitation.

Circumcising boys

A circumcision (ympärileikkaus) is always an irrevocable operation. If it is performed for a non-medical reason, a boy’s bodily integrity is violated. A circumcision may only be performed by a qualified doctor. A written consent from the boy’s guardians is required for the circumcision. If the child has two guardians, both of them must consent to the operation, or otherwise, it must not be performed. The boy has the right to refuse the operation.

A circumcision must not be performed without pain relief provided by a doctor, and it must be performed under sterile conditions. A non-medical circumcision is not covered by publicly funded health care, so it cannot be performed at a public health centre, and it must be paid for by the party who is having it performed.

You can ask for more information on circumcision from a maternity clinic, a doctor at a health and social services centre, a school nurse or a school doctor.

Female genital mutilation

Female genital mutilation is a crime in Finland. It can be punished with many years in prison. It is also a crime to make a girl undergo genital mutilation abroad.

Genital mutilation causes a wide range of serious health problems and is often harmful to health even in adulthood. Mutilation is also a frightening and potentially very shocking experience for a child.

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