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HEALTH

Swiss survey: smoking and drugs aren’t ‘cool’ – but drinking still is

Young people in Switzerland are increasingly rejecting smoking and drugs, but still enjoy drinking alcohol, according to a new survey.

Swiss survey: smoking and drugs aren’t ‘cool’ – but drinking still is
Photo: anclave/Depositphotos
The online survey by newspaper 20 Minutes questioned 19,233 young people aged 14 to 24 during December.
 
It found that 60 percent of respondents never smoked cigarettes and only 23 percent said they smoked every day. 
 
More than half said smoking wasn’t considered an attractive thing to do. 
 
Questioned about cannabis, 71 percent said they never smoked joints, and 53 percent said pot-smokers weren’t considered cool.
 
Hard drugs, including ecstasy, MDMA and cocaine, were considered uncool by 81 percent of respondents. 
 
However the picture was rather different when it came to alcohol, with only 21 percent of young people saying they never drank, and 71 percent saying drinking was a cool thing to do. 
 
Speaking to the paper, psychologist Christian Fichter said smoking didn’t fit with the current trend among young people to live a healthy life. 
 
“Someone who wants to be cool eats well, does sport and doesn’t take drugs,” he said, but noted that drinking was clearly an exception.
 
“In contrast with smoking, drinking alcohol in moderation is relaxing and has a social side,” he said.
 
According to Swiss Addiction, alcohol is “anchored in Swiss culture” and 80 percent of people aged over 15 drink regularly. 
 
Although alcohol consumption in Switzerland has dropped since the 1980s, a recent study showed that a fifth of the population over 15 drink too much alcohol or too often, a statistic that is on the rise in the 20-24 age group. 
 
However the last survey carried out by HSBC for Addiction Suisse in 2014 showed that both alcohol consumption and tobacco smoking among young people aged 11 to 15 had reduced since the previous survey four years earlier.
 
In 2014, 6.6 percent of 15-year-old boys and 6.4 percent of their female peers said they smoked daily.
 
As for cannabis, 19.2 percent of 15-year-old girls and 30.1 percent of boys said they had smoked pot before, around half in the month preceding the survey.
 
But those figures constituted a fall back to 1998 levels, after a significant rise in cannabis consumption among young people between 1986 and 2002.

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HEALTH

How difficult is it to change your doctor in Switzerland?

If you already have a GP doctor in Switzerland but, for some reason, need or want to switch, how easy is it to do so?

How difficult is it to change your doctor in Switzerland?

There are a number of reasons why you may want to leave your GP and find a new one.

Maybe you don’t like their bedside manner, are not happy with the medical care, or are simply moving away and need to find someone closer to your new home.

Whatever the reason, whether or not you can easily switch from one doctor to another depends on the kind of health insurance you have.

Different models, different rights

If you have the ‘standard’ — and typically the most expensive — type of the obligatory health insurance (KVG / LaMal), then you are free to switch your GPs at will, and you don’t have to inform the insurance carrier of the switch.

However, if you have opted for one of the cheaper insurance models, then your right to switch doctors may be limited:

Family doctor model’

It is the most popular in Switzerland (and 20 percent cheaper than standard insurance policy premiums).

Under this model, you have a family doctor who will manage your care — that is, treat you or send you to specialists if needed (with the exception of gynecologists and eye doctors, who don’t require a referral).

You can’t, however, change doctors at will, unless your insurance company approves the switch.

Telemedicine model

If you have opted for the Telemed formula, you must call a health hotline set up by your insurance company.

They will give you a referral to a doctor or hospital based on your symptoms.
 
Heath Maintainance Organisation (HMO)

Under this model, policyholders are required to consult a particular HMO practice. Two disadvantages of this alternative is a limited choice of doctors and you also need a referral to see a specialist.

So the only option that gives you the right to switch doctors with no hassle is the standard one, with the family doctor model also possibly allowing you to do so, under certain circumstances.

The way Telmed and HMO are set up, however, switching doctors is not possible. If that option is important to you, then you will have to switch to the (more expensive) standard insurance.

The only exception to the above restrictions are emergencies, when you need urgent medical treatment.

Assuming you have the standard model, how do you go about changing?

The process is pretty simple: you can find physicians in your area either through recommendations from people you know (which is the best way to ensure you will not be getting an ‘anonymous’ doctor) or, if no recommendations are available, then through the OneDoc platform, which lists which doctors are taking new patients and where.

You can then make an appointment directly online.

When you do so, ask your current physician’s office to transfer your file to the new doc.

You don’t need to explain the reasons for the switch.
 
READ ALSO: The essential Swiss websites you need to use for health matters 
 

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