SHARE
COPY LINK

HEALTH

Health premiums set to rise steeply next year

Despite negative inflation in Switzerland, householders will have to pay substantially more for heath care next year, the health insurance association Santésuisse has warned.

Health premiums set to rise steeply next year
Photo: homestreet.ch

Santésuisse director Verena Nold told Swiss national radio SRF insurance premiums would rise by three to four per cent but could be even higher in some cantons.

Premiums in 2015 rose 3.5 per cent over 2014 levels.

“In cantons that have a lot of specialists, i.e. the urban centres of Geneva, Zurich, Basel and Bern, people should reckon on a bigger increase than in the rural cantons,” Nold told SRF.

She said the reason was the growing number of specialists who charged ever higher amounts per patient.

Specialists including urologists and radiologists were charging for consulting medical files, she said. In the past two years costs in this area had grown by 140 million francs.

Another factor driving up premiums was that hospitals were offering more treatments on an outpatient basis, meaning that overnight stays were reduced.

These costs were being transferred to insured persons, Nold said, as the cantons did not finance outpatient treatment. 

Health insurance is compulsory in Switzerland. On arrival in the country people must take out a policy within three months.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

HEALTH INSURANCE

Could glasses and contact lenses soon be covered by Swiss health insurance?

The Swiss health system is ranked among the best in the world, but some essentials, like glasses, aren't automatically covered by health insurance. That could soon change, however

Could glasses and contact lenses soon be covered by Swiss health insurance?

Green Party Federal Councillor Katharina Prelicz-Huber revealed in an interview with newspaper 20 Minuten this week that the Federal Parliament had tabled a motion to include prescription glasses and contact lenses in Switzerland’s mandatory health insurance scheme. 

Prelicz-Huber stated: “The purpose of compulsory health insurance is to provide the services you need to get or stay healthy,”

The motion forms part of the legislation that will be voted on during the 2024 summer session of the Federal Council. 

Proposed changes 

According to Switzerland’s peak optician body, 4 in 5 Swiss wear glasses or contact lenses at some point. 

It’s no surprise that statistics repository, Statista, projects the Swiss eyewear industry to be worth €1.37 billion by 2028. 

Currently, glasses and contact lenses are covered for up to 180 francs for children until age eighteen, if they are proscribed by a doctor.

Adults can also claim money back for glasses and contact lenses – however, they must be suffering from one of a short list of specific conditions such as keratoconus – where the cornea is distorted – or severe myopia, otherwise known as near-sightedness.

They must also have been specifically prescribed them by a doctor or optometrist. 

Otherwise, supplemental optical insurance must be purchased in Switzerland to ensure you can recoup the cost. 

Under the Green Party proposal, glasses, contact lenses, and other visual aids would be covered, regardless of age. 

Rising premiums prompt opposition 

Not everybody agrees with the proposal. 

The right-wing SVP has already spoken out against it, with Federal Councillor Diana Gutjahr arguing: “If we seriously want to slow down the burdensome and constantly rising health costs for the benefit of the population, we [must] show the political will not to constantly expand the benefits of compulsory health insurance.”

A spokesman for the the health insurance advocacy group Santesuisse, Matthias Müller, echoed Gutjahr, claiming that insurance constitutes “financing for extraordinary events such as illness.”

“If almost everyone benefits from a certain service, it is no longer an insurance benefit.”

A date for the vote has yet to be announced. 

SHOW COMMENTS