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National resources: Switzerland

Introduction

Switzerland is a federal republic composed of 26 cantons. Switzerland’s health system is highly decentralised, with significant responsibility for public health measures and policies resting with the country’s cantons. The Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH) is responsible for coordinating national health policies, but the cantons have a high degree of autonomy in implementing these policies.

Health authorities

The FOPH plays a critical role in setting national public health goals and guidelines, overseeing the country’s health insurance system, and coordinating responses to public health emergencies. It has a Communicable Diseases Division in charge of monitoring, publishing regular reports on the epidemiological situation, and laying down and implementing prevention and control strategies. The FOPH also manages national health registries and monitors health indicators, such as disease incidence rates and vaccination coverage. FOPH may also require laboratories, healthcare institutions and other institutions of the cantons to communicate their stocks of therapeutic products, protective equipment and other medical goods essential for maintaining healthcare capacities. In 2023, the Swiss Government (FOPH, the Federal Statistical Office, and the Federal Department of Home Affairs) launched DigiSanté, a national programme to foster the digital transformation of the Swiss healthcare systems. DigiSanté will create an ecosystem where different actors produce, use and process data within and for the benefit of healthcare.

In addition to the FOPH, there are several other agencies and institutions involved in shaping public health policy and research in Switzerland. These include a network of National Reference Centers, Swiss societies for microbiology and infectious diseases, the Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences, the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, lobbies and the Swiss National Science Foundation, among others.

Switzerland also participates in international public health organisations, such as the World Health Organization (WHO) which provide guidance and support for public health measures at the national and international level.

In March 2020, the Swiss Federal Council declared a state of emergency and announced a series of measures to control the spread of SARS-CoV-2, restricting the cantons’ power of decision. Country’s extensive network of laboratories, composed of 15 university hospital centres, private laboratories and high-throughput sequencing platforms, ramped up testing capacity to identify new cases. A national genomic surveillance program was notably implemented by the Reference Laboratory for Emerging Viral Infections in collaboration with the FOPH. The genomic data were generated by the laboratories and fed into the Swiss Pathogen Surveillance Platform (SPSP), which sent automatic variants reports to FOPH, allowing it to have and provide regular updates on the variants of concern on the national dashboard. Together with other contextual data, it supported FOPH in issuing guidance to the public on how to prevent the spread of the virus. The government also launched a contact tracing app to help identify potential COVID-19 cases and prevent further transmission.

On 1 April 2022, Switzerland returned to a normal situation, and responsibility for measures to protect the population moved back to the cantons. The measures can therefore differ from one canton to another.

Disease surveillance initiatives

Switzerland has a well-established disease surveillance system that plays a critical role in monitoring and responding to outbreaks of infectious diseases. Here are some of the key disease surveillance initiatives in Switzerland:

  • FOPH coordinates a sentinel surveillance system for monitoring a range of infectious diseases including influenza-like illness or COVID-19 cases. It involves a network of healthcare providers who report data on disease incidence and trends. Samples may also be sent to national reference laboratories for further characterization e.g., by PCR or sequencing.
  • Swiss Paediatric Surveillance Unit: The Swiss Paediatric Surveillance Unit (SPSU) is a national survey system to document rare paediatric pathologies and rare complications of more common diseases by children treated in hospitals in Switzerland, including those caused by some infectious disease.
  • National Notification System: The FOPH National Notification System requires healthcare providers to report cases of certain infectious diseases to the FOPH. This system enables the FOPH to track the spread of diseases, identify outbreaks, and initiate public health responses.
  • Laboratory surveillance: Switzerland has an extensive network of National Reference Centers that are involved in disease surveillance, including the CRIVE/NAVI - the National Reference Center for Influenza and Emerging Viruses, and Anresis - the Swiss Centre for Antibiotic Resistance surveillance. These laboratories conduct diagnostic tests and monitor trends in disease activity.
  • Hospital-based surveillance of Influenza and COVID-19 (CH-SUR): the Geneva University Hospitals, the Institute of Global Health at the University of Geneva, and the FOPH maintain an Influenza and COVID-19 hospital-based sentinel surveillance system. This registry records clinical and epidemiological information on Influenza, COVID-19 and other respiratory virus infections, collecting data from 18 Swiss hospitals.
  • Travel health surveillance: Switzerland also has a system for monitoring the health of travellers, particularly those returning from high-risk areas. The system involves screening travellers for symptoms of infectious diseases and providing them with information and guidance on how to prevent the spread of disease.

All these surveillance initiatives are funded by the FOPH and coordinated by them or in collaboration with institutions and laboratories. In the specific case of COVID-19, all the national monitoring efforts are summarised here.

Dashboards and visualisation platforms

National data sources

  • SPSP - A secure One-health online platform that enables near real-time sharing under controlled access of pathogen whole genome sequences (WGS) and their associated clinical/epidemiological metadata. Since 2021 it has centralized and processed all SARS-CoV-2 sequencing data within the national genomic surveillance program.
  • Swiss Biobanking Platform - a list of aggregated information on Swiss biobanks and infrastructures.
  • Swissmedic - The Swiss entity who authorises distribution in Switzerland of any medicinal products.
  • SPHN Consortium on Maelstrom - Among them the Swiss HIV Cohort study http://www.shcs.ch/
  • Anresis - The Swiss Centre for Antibiotic Resistance is a nationwide, representative surveillance system and research instrument for antibiotic resistance and consumption. It is led by the Institute for Infectious Diseases (IFIK) of the University of Bern and is financially supported by the FOPH and the IFIK.

Regulations

Ethics

Appointed by the Federal Council, the supreme executive and directorial authority of the Swiss Confederation, the Swiss National Advisory Commission on Biomedical Ethics (NCE) advises the authorities from an ethical perspective in the field of human biomedicine. It also counts on the support from the Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences, an independent institution that provides general guidance on ethical issues in medicine and healthcare, e.g. for the triage of Covid-19 patients. It develops guidelines and recommendations for medical professionals, policymakers, and the public.

Regarding research, the Swiss National Ethics Committee is the umbrella organisation of the cantonal Ethics Committees in charge of reviewing and approving study protocols.

Laws and regulations

The Communicable Diseases Legislation aims to enable a timely detection, monitoring, prevention and control of infectious diseases. It revolves around the Federal Act of 28 September 2012 on Controlling Communicable Human Diseases (Epidemics Act, EpidA) and ordinances. A revised version should be presented in June 2023.

The use of human data in research is regulated by Human Research Legislation, and in particular the Human Research Act and Ordinances. The legislation is designed to safeguard the dignity, privacy and health of people involved in research.

Contributors