COVID-19 vaccinations will be free of charge in France
French Prime Minister Jean Castex said COVID-19 vaccinations will not be made compulsory but "will be free for all" in the country's social security system.
"Getting a vaccine is also about protecting others. It is a choice of trust, we must be as numerous as possible to get a vaccine," Castex said at a press conference Thursday evening, while unveiling the country's vaccination strategy.
France will launch a COVID-19 vaccination campaign within weeks, pending regulatory approval by the European Medicines Agency. The program will run throughout 2021, staggered over three categories of people.
The first phase is slated to begin in January, with vaccines administered to nursing home residents and staff, representing 1 million people. A second phase starting in February will see 14 million people inoculated, based on age and medical criteria. The third and final phase, beginning in March, will target the remainder of the population who wish to be vaccinated.
Through deals clinched by the European Union, France has secured some 200 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines from several pharmaceutical companies and biotechnology firms that developed them and have applied for temporary authorization. Castex said that's enough doses to inoculate 100 million people -- more than France's entire population.
As of Friday afternoon, France's health ministry had confirmed a total of 2,257,331 cases of COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, including 54,140 deaths.
ABC News' Ibtissem Guenfoud contributed to this report.