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Study reveals slight drop in number of overweight children in Switzerland

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
October 28, 2025
in Switzerland
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Study reveals slight drop in number of overweight children in Switzerland
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Slight fall in the number of overweight children and teenagers

The proportion of overweight adolescents in Switzerland has stagnated at secondary school level (20.9% in 2025 compared with 20.5% in 2010).


Keystone-SDA





Generated with artificial intelligence.

The number of overweight primary school children in Switzerland has fallen slightly over the past 15 years, according to figures released on Monday.


This content was published on


October 27, 2025 – 13:40

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Around 11.1% of primary school children were overweight in 2025, compared with 15.8% in 2010. In Swiss upper secondary school system, the proportion fell between 2010 (19.1%) and 2017 (16.5%), before rising to 18.6% in 2025. The proportion of overweight adolescents has stagnated at secondary level (20.9% in 2025 compared with 20.5% in 2010), according to Health Promotion Switzerland on Monday.

Differences between cantons

Compared with the first measurement in 2010, the overall prevalence of overweight children and adolescents has fallen by 1.3%.

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In Switzerland, 2.2 million people are affected by non-communicable diseases, partly because people are not eating a balanced diet.



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Given the lack of resources available for the prevention of overweight and obesity among this section of the population, as well as the upward trend globally, this result, although “modest”, is viewed as a “success” by Health Promotion Switzerland.

The data reveals major differences between Swiss regions. At primary school level, the proportion of overweight children varies by six percentage points between cantons. This is even more than eight percentage points at upper secondary level. Whereas previous assessments showed clear differences between urban and rural areas, these are now barely perceptible.

Origin and social background as risk factors

The risk of obesity is closely linked to the living conditions of children and families. Children of parents with no post-compulsory education are up to three times more likely to be overweight than children of parents who have gone on to higher education. The overweight figures are also much higher among pupils without a Swiss passport (24%) than among their Swiss peers (14.2%).

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Half of men and a third of women too fat

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Demographics

Swiss health survey: 52% of men are overweight, 34% of women




This content was published on


May 19, 2025



The results of the Swiss Health Survey 2022 reveal clear differences between men and women: 55% of women and 44% of men live with at least one chronic illness.



Read more: Swiss health survey: 52% of men are overweight, 34% of women


Targeted measures are therefore still needed, particularly for children from disadvantaged social backgrounds. The problem is not the lack of such measures, but rather their limited reach, according to Health Promotion Switzerland.

The survey was based on data from over 30,000 schoolchildren in eleven cantons and four cities.

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Translated from French by DeepL/sb

We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication.  

Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

If you have any questions about how we work, write to us at english@swissinfo.ch

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