Zürcher Nachrichten - Swiss healthcare united against immigration cap plan

EUR -
AED 4.202904
AFN 72.668697
ALL 94.364313
AMD 421.369645
ANG 2.048983
AOA 1049.438408
ARS 1707.990299
AUD 1.651479
AWG 2.059966
AZN 1.94543
BAM 1.961311
BBD 2.304665
BDT 141.084559
BGN 1.935087
BHD 0.431408
BIF 3414.950286
BMD 1.144426
BND 1.480353
BOB 7.924196
BRL 5.973332
BSD 1.14421
BTN 109.217484
BWP 15.517464
BYN 3.319598
BYR 22430.740046
BZD 2.301356
CAD 1.622858
CDF 2603.567796
CHF 0.918069
CLF 0.026812
CLP 1055.297577
CNY 7.775742
CNH 7.768446
COP 3858.659501
CRC 520.760916
CUC 1.144426
CUP 30.327276
CVE 110.575686
CZK 24.183316
DJF 203.761622
DKK 7.474249
DOP 68.04058
DZD 152.5784
EGP 56.182825
ERN 17.166383
ETB 184.686804
FJD 2.594012
FKP 0.861898
GBP 0.856105
GEL 3.021391
GGP 0.861898
GHS 13.016459
GIP 0.861898
GMD 84.112565
GNF 10035.064167
GTQ 8.729413
GYD 239.351464
HKD 8.975563
HNL 30.625782
HRK 7.536275
HTG 149.66922
HUF 353.876954
IDR 20588.61552
ILS 3.42601
IMP 0.861898
INR 108.989392
IQD 1498.998665
IRR 1574729.505281
ISK 144.003397
JEP 0.861898
JMD 179.714948
JOD 0.811378
JPY 184.180976
KES 147.962233
KGS 100.080273
KHR 4593.887456
KMF 495.535906
KPW 1029.983362
KRW 1764.471343
KWD 0.349382
KYD 0.953571
KZT 543.321833
LAK 25665.889634
LBP 102466.907723
LKR 384.062395
LRD 207.681712
LSL 18.731786
LTL 3.379191
LVL 0.692252
LYD 7.34965
MAD 10.720975
MDL 20.264761
MGA 4860.614482
MKD 61.646609
MMK 2402.443154
MNT 4101.83814
MOP 9.244393
MRU 45.677743
MUR 54.097384
MVR 17.681245
MWK 1984.26656
MXN 20.004213
MYR 4.669598
MZN 73.132091
NAD 18.731868
NGN 1569.946194
NIO 42.107759
NOK 11.260746
NPR 174.751238
NZD 2.00683
OMR 0.44002
PAB 1.144205
PEN 3.911138
PGK 5.02707
PHP 70.303207
PKR 318.182442
PLN 4.283871
PYG 6953.537477
QAR 4.17112
RON 5.231399
RSD 117.382542
RUB 88.987639
RWF 1677.49864
SAR 4.311281
SBD 9.2116
SCR 15.527042
SDG 687.232166
SEK 11.053377
SGD 1.477945
SHP 0.854429
SLE 27.895385
SLL 23998.034979
SOS 653.931649
SRD 43.08421
STD 23687.297524
STN 24.568924
SVC 10.012131
SYP 126.495753
SZL 18.730382
THB 37.98634
TJS 10.584293
TMT 4.005489
TND 3.385211
TOP 2.755502
TRY 53.438526
TTD 7.762777
TWD 36.491722
TZS 3004.120422
UAH 51.277522
UGX 4193.764973
USD 1.144426
UYU 45.928444
UZS 13631.120938
VES 723.932325
VND 30086.946725
VUV 137.32777
WST 3.169652
XAF 657.802365
XAG 0.018806
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.092867
XCG 2.062158
XDR 0.818285
XOF 657.805247
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.063992
ZAR 18.607326
ZMK 10301.201868
ZMW 20.85341
ZWL 368.504548
  • CMSC

    0.0350

    21.985

    +0.16%

  • BCC

    -0.0800

    75.4

    -0.11%

  • JRI

    0.0450

    12.985

    +0.35%

  • BCE

    0.3150

    21.335

    +1.48%

  • RIO

    0.4190

    93.769

    +0.45%

  • NGG

    2.1100

    82.29

    +2.56%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    65.61

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    22.165

    -0.07%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    19.75

    +1.27%

  • GSK

    1.9150

    53.215

    +3.6%

  • BTI

    0.9600

    61.52

    +1.56%

  • AZN

    9.3450

    193.205

    +4.84%

  • RELX

    0.4250

    31.805

    +1.34%

  • BP

    0.9350

    37.085

    +2.52%

  • VOD

    0.0590

    13.069

    +0.45%

Swiss healthcare united against immigration cap plan
Swiss healthcare united against immigration cap plan / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

Swiss healthcare united against immigration cap plan

At a Swiss nursing home, Marcelle Mivelaz celebrated her 80th birthday surrounded by friends, as a team of mostly foreign nurses and caregivers ensured the day ran smoothly.

Text size:

Swiss healthcare facilities like this one, in Cheseaux-sur-Lausanne in the west of the country, are heavily reliant on foreign workers amid chronic staff shortages.

Now the sector fears that a popular vote on June 14 on a proposal to dramatically slash immigration could cripple the industry, with a potentially critical outcome.

"If there aren't enough caregivers, our healthcare system is headed for disaster," Carine Savioz, a Swiss nurse at the Cheseaux-sur-Lausanne home, told AFP.

"This worries me," acknowledged 81-year-old Marie-Therese Barraz, standing next to Mivelaz.

"We must have respect for the people who care for nursing home residents."

Put forward by the hard-right Swiss People's Party (SVP), the "No to a Switzerland with 10 million!" proposal wants the wealthy Alpine nation's population -- currently 9.1 million -- capped below 10 million until 2050.

The initiative faces broad opposition across the government, parliament and business sector, but opinion polls suggest the vote could be tight.

The healthcare sector, which struggles to recruit Swiss nationals put off by the notoriously demanding nature of the work and relatively unattractive salaries, has been front and centre in the debate.

- 'Chaos initiative' -

For Christian Weiler, director of the Primeroche Foundation which looks after some 360 people across several establishments, including the Cheseaux-sur-Lausanne nursing home, the situation is clear.

"We have some 240 employees, nearly 80 percent of whom are foreign nationals," he told AFP.

He said his foundation would like to open other nursing homes, but feared it would struggle to find staff.

"Currently, 240 people are waiting for a place in the Lausanne area," he pointed out, warning that lacking spots could have dire societal implications.

"If there aren't enough places, they'll go to the hospital," he said.

And "when hospitals are full of elderly people, they won't be able to fulfil their role, and the system will become very problematic" as the population ages.

The Swiss government also warns that the proposal "threatens the proper functioning of society", with hospitals and nursing homes unable to care for the sick and elderly the way they do today.

The SVP rejects that.

It is calling for more Swiss staff to be trained and points out that its proposal would still allow 40,000 foreigners to immigrate each year.

However, the business and healthcare sectors say that is not enough.

An alliance of major players in the sector, including the Swiss National Association of Hospitals and Clinics and the Swiss Nurses' Association, has formed a committee to denounce what it calls the SVP's "chaos initiative", warning it "endangers" patients.

The committee fears that if services are understaffed or forced to rely on less qualified personnel, the "risk of mortality increases", particularly in emergency situations.

- 'Urgent' need for staff -

According to the Swiss Medical Association (FMH), the country "remains far from being able to ensure the replenishment of its medical workforce on its own".

The healthcare system is structurally dependent on doctors trained abroad. They account for 43 percent of all doctors -- a figure which continues to rise.

"Each year, our universities award between 1,200 and 1,300 medical diplomas," but "we would need 3,500 to 4,000 young doctors per year," FMH vice-president Philippe Eggimann told the Swiss newspaper Le Temps.

Thomas Blasi, an SVP parliamentarian and an independent pharmacist in Geneva, charged that the sector's reliance on immigrants was taking a toll on Swiss health workers.

"Despite the urgent need for healthcare staff, our young graduates cannot find employment because we prefer to rely on foreign workers," he said.

Others, however, highlight a persistent shortage of Swiss candidates.

At Geneva University Hospitals (HUG), nursing director Sandra Merkli said 200 to 300 nurses needed to be recruited each year -- while the Geneva canton's medical school only provides 150 to 160.

In 2025, nearly one in two of HUG's approximately 13,000 staff was a foreign national, with the proportion reaching around 60 percent for nursing staff and 45 percent among doctors.

X.Blaser--NZN