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Home Switzerland

Swiss hospitals need radical overhaul: study

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
November 27, 2025
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 9 mins read
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Hospitals face quality problems and bottlenecks

Hospitals face quality problems and bottlenecks


Keystone / Cyril Zingaro





Generated with artificial intelligence.

Swiss hospitals face quality declines, bottlenecks and losses exceeding CHF1 billion, according to a study commissioned by the hospital association.


This content was published on


November 27, 2025 – 15:57

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Continuing as before is not an option, says Paul Sailer of PwC Switzerland, the company that authored the study. Sailer sees the most significant problem as the shortage of skilled workers. “The current structure can no longer be maintained.”

Providing good, high-quality healthcare is becoming increasingly difficult. Therefore, a transformation is needed, Sailer added.

The hospital association H+ sees three levers for this transformation, as president Regine Sauter explains: “We propose three areas of action in which changes must occur: outpatient care, digitalization, and networked and coordinated care.”

Outpatient treatment means going home the same day instead of staying overnight in the hospital. Other countries are already much further ahead than Switzerland in this regard, according to Sauter. And to enable more outpatient treatment, greater digitalization is also needed.

Finally, the Sauter mentions networked care – new models of hospitals and a different division of tasks will be needed. “Hospitals must distinguish themselves where necessary. And they must collaborate in networks.”

These networks must not fail due to parochialism. “Hospital care must not stop at cantonal borders. It must develop supra-regionally and in accordance with the needs of patients.”

Recently, there have been increasing political demands that the federal government should take over hospital planning – if the cantons do not coordinate better.

The hospital association, however, wants nothing to do with such national hospital planning. “Coordination at the regional level is needed. Patient flows, population density, and the needs of the regions must be taken into account,” says Sauter.   The hospital association believes that higher tariffs are needed to finance this transformation. These tariffs would have to be adjusted to reflect actual costs. This would then be the only way to curb cost growth in the long term.

More

Losses of CHF 350 million for Swiss hospitals in 2024

More

Swiss hospitals cut losses but most still struggle financially




This content was published on


Nov 25, 2025



Swiss hospitals narrowed their losses last year, but two-thirds of hospitals reported a worsening financial position.



Read more: Swiss hospitals cut losses but most still struggle financially


Translated from German by DeepL/mga

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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