For many Swiss cancer survivors, winning the battle against the disease is followed by another fight: for financial security. This article explores the campaign for a 'Right to Be Forgotten' in insurance applications, which aims to prevent former patients from being penalized for their medical history.

"People donât understand how easy it is to drop below the poverty line after a diagnosis, even after treatment ends."
"You can be fired while sick. Then, when youâre cured and want to work again, youâre locked out of coverage."
Winning the battle against cancer is a medical miracle, but for thousands of Swiss citizens, the victory is met with a cold, financial reality. A historical diagnosis follows survivors like a shadow, manifesting the moment they check a box on a private insurance questionnaire. In Switzerlandâs current market, a single 'yes' regarding past illness can trigger immediate rejection, sweeping exclusions, or premiums that soar beyond the reach of the average household. This isn't just a matter of paperwork; it is a systemic barrier to the 'normal life' promised after remission. While physical health returns, financial security remains under siege as private insurers weaponize medical history to mitigate risk. The stakes are staggering: without access to income protection, the self-employed and those without corporate cover face a precarious existence where a minor relapseâor even an unrelated illnessâcould plummet them into poverty. The Swiss Cancer League warns that the transition from patient to productive citizen is being sabotaged by a system that refuses to look past the biopsy.
A critical five-year threshold stands at the heart of a new legislative push to grant survivors the 'Right to Be Forgotten' (RTBF). A motion currently gripping the Swiss parliament proposes a radical shift: limiting the disclosure period for past illnesses to just five years for individual sickness daily allowance insurance. This specific form of coverage is the lifeblood of the self-employed, providing a vital safety net when illness strikes. Aline Descloux of the Swiss Cancer League highlights a brutal cycle: patients are often fired while sick, and once cured, they find themselves locked out of the very coverage they need to return to work safely. By mandating a five-year 'expiry date' on medical history, reformers aim to dismantle this trap. The proposal argues that after half a decade of remission, the statistical risk of relapse stabilizes, making continued discrimination not just cruel, but actuarially questionable. This movement isn't asking for special treatment; it is demanding an end to the permanent branding of former patients as high-risk liabilities.
While Switzerland grapples with the ethics of medical data, its European neighbors have already surged ahead with protective frameworks. Belgium has emerged as a pioneer, where the Right to Be Forgotten already shields salary protection insurance after five years of remission. In contrast, the Swiss market remains a fragmented landscape where no such national protection exists. Even the European Union has codified this dignity, with 2023 consumer credit rules capping disclosure periods at 15 yearsâa maximum that many member states are already undercutting. Switzerlandâs delay creates a startling disparity: a survivor in Brussels can secure a mortgage or income protection with ease, while a survivor in Zurich remains a 'high-risk' pariah. This legislative vacuum doesn't just affect the individual; it impacts the broader Swiss economy by discouraging entrepreneurship among survivors who fear losing their safety net. The pressure is mounting on the Federal Council to align Swiss standards with the evolving human rights landscape of the continent.
The road to reform in Bern is paved with rigorous democratic hurdles, but the momentum is unprecedented. If the parliamentary motion succeeds, the Swiss Federal Council must draft legislation that could redefine the relationship between insurers and the insured. However, the path is not without resistance. Any new law can be challenged by a national referendum, requiring 50,000 signatures to force a public vote. This potential for a 'people's veto' ensures that the Right to Be Forgotten will be a topic of intense national debate. For the Swiss Cancer League and its allies, the focus remains narrow and strategicâtargeting the most critical gaps in coverage first. The goal is a future where a medical file is a history of resilience, not a permanent barrier to the Swiss dream. As more people survive cancer than ever before, the urgency to modernize insurance laws is no longer a niche concern; it is a fundamental test of Switzerlandâs commitment to social solidarity and the right to a second chance.