The Swiss government is taking steps to improve care for endometriosis, a disease affecting one in ten women. Meanwhile, a new survey shows that while doctors' working hours have slightly decreased, clinician exhaustion and risks to patient safety remain at critical levels.

"I canât do any more."
"Early diagnosis is key."
Switzerlandâs world-class healthcare system is grappling with a dual-front crisis that threatens its very foundation. While the Federal Council finally acknowledges the 'structural deficits' in treating female-specific diseases like endometriosis, the clinicians expected to deliver this care are drowning in a sea of overwork. This is a system under unprecedented pressure. We are seeing a historic shift where the government is forced to intervene in womenâs health, yet the workforce responsible for these breakthroughs is reporting exhaustion levels that jeopardize the lives of the very citizens they serve. The tension is palpable: a drive for better quality care is colliding head-on with a medical staff that is reaching its breaking point.
One in ten women in Switzerland suffers from endometriosis, yet many endure years of agony before receiving a correct diagnosis. The Swiss government has now officially recognized this as a critical failure. In a bold report approved this June, the Federal Council admitted that the current management of typically female diseases is plagued by structural gaps. Endometriosis isn't just 'period pain'; it is a debilitating condition causing chronic pelvic pain, fatigue, and infertility. The Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH) has been ordered to weaponize available data to overhaul the treatment landscape. This isn't just a medical issueâit's an economic one, as the disease ravages the professional and educational lives of ten percent of the female population. The government is now demanding that medical societies and insurers align to ensure that 'early diagnosis' becomes a reality rather than a slogan.
A staggering 52% of Swiss doctors admit to thinking 'I can't do any more' on a regular basis. Despite a marginal decrease in average weekly hoursâfalling from 56.3 to 54.6âthe workload remains dangerously high. The Association of Swiss Assistant and Senior Physicians (VSAO) warns that these figures are deceptive. While the 'slight fall' might look good on paper, 58% of respondents are still reporting blatant violations of labor laws. We are witnessing a culture of overwork that has become systemic. Doctors are working nearly 15 hours more than the standard Swiss work week, a grueling pace that is unsustainable. The Demoscope survey of 2,400 clinicians paints a grim picture: the slight reduction in hours has done nothing to alleviate the 'critical level' of fatigue permeating Swiss hospitals.
The most alarming statistic from the recent VSAO survey is this: 60% of doctors have witnessed patient safety being compromised due to work-related exhaustion. This is no longer just a labor dispute; it is a public safety emergency. When six out of ten doctors admit that fatigue has put patients at risk in the last two years, the 'quality' of Swiss healthcare becomes a question of luck rather than a guarantee. The governmentâs push for better endometriosis care requires alert, focused cliniciansâthe very thing the system is currently burning out. Exhausted doctors make mistakes, and in a high-stakes medical environment, those mistakes are life-altering. The correlation between the 54.6-hour work week and the 60% risk rate is a direct indictment of current hospital management practices.
Switzerland stands at a crossroads. The Federal Councilâs move to prioritize endometriosis is a landmark victory for womenâs health, but it cannot succeed in a vacuum. To fix the 'structural deficits' in care, the government must first fix the structural deficits in the medical workforce. The VSAO is calling for more than just 'awareness'; they are demanding a radical enforcement of labor laws. Meanwhile, the government is looking toward 'coordinated care' and 'appropriate fees' to incentivize better outcomes for women. The path forward is clear: Switzerland must transition from a system that exploits its providers to one that empowers them. If the Confederation fails to address the burnout crisis, the ambitious goals for improving womenâs health will remain nothing more than a report on a desk in Bern. The time for 'slight decreases' in hours is over; the time for a total systemic overhaul is now.