
Cross-border business travellers will soon find it easier to pick up medication and share medical data in Austria. The Bundesrat on 24 October passed amendments to the Health Telematics Act and Social Insurance Code that enable Austria’s participation in the European Health Data Space (EHDS). The package creates a national contact point for digital health and clears the way for EU-wide ePrescriptions (“EU-Rezept”) and the downloadable patient summary (“EU-Patientenkurzakte”).
Once the system goes live – expected during 2026 – a Finnish executive on a Vienna assignment could walk into an Austrian pharmacy with a digitally signed prescription issued back home, while Austrian travellers will be able to obtain emergency medication elsewhere in the EU without paper bureaucracy. The patient summary will give foreign doctors instant access to allergies, chronic conditions and current medication, a long-sought improvement for posted workers, boarding-school students and digital nomads.
For employers, the reform reduces duty-of-care risk in mobility programmes and may eventually lower private health-insurance costs as duplicate consultations are avoided. Digital-health vendors see new market opportunities in secure identity verification, translation services and mobile-app integration.
Data-protection advocates have welcomed the opt-out provisions but stress that interoperability testing must prevent service disruptions during the phased rollout. Companies should inform travelling staff about upcoming consent choices and monitor how corporate medical-benefit providers integrate the new features.
Once the system goes live – expected during 2026 – a Finnish executive on a Vienna assignment could walk into an Austrian pharmacy with a digitally signed prescription issued back home, while Austrian travellers will be able to obtain emergency medication elsewhere in the EU without paper bureaucracy. The patient summary will give foreign doctors instant access to allergies, chronic conditions and current medication, a long-sought improvement for posted workers, boarding-school students and digital nomads.
For employers, the reform reduces duty-of-care risk in mobility programmes and may eventually lower private health-insurance costs as duplicate consultations are avoided. Digital-health vendors see new market opportunities in secure identity verification, translation services and mobile-app integration.
Data-protection advocates have welcomed the opt-out provisions but stress that interoperability testing must prevent service disruptions during the phased rollout. Companies should inform travelling staff about upcoming consent choices and monitor how corporate medical-benefit providers integrate the new features.





