All rights that Slovenian law grants to patients with coeliac disease
are limited exclusively to children up to the age of 18, or 26 in the case of those in educa- tion.
The current situation, wherein adult coeliac patients receive no assistance from
the state or the insurance community due to their disease, constitutes a
violation of their right to healthcare. To regulate this field, the article assesses comparative legal regimes,
broadly divided into four groups: 1) social assis- tance supplements, 2)
flat-rate benefits, 3) benefits in kind, and 4) tax relief. It then confronts the question of which
regime would be most appropriate for
application within Slovenian legal framework. Although, at a theoretical level,
the option of flat-rate benefits seems particularly attractive, the author
concludes that due to the challenges of integrating such benefits into any area of
social security law, the most appropriate alternative is to provide
benefits in the form of tax
relief.
Key words: celiac disease,
patients’ rights, healthcare, compulsory health in- surance, social assistance,
tax relief, social security law, Slovenia.