Research across 24 countries shows opt-out systems increase deceased donations by 1.21 per million but decrease living donations by 4.59 per million. Swisstransplant warns against premature conclusions for Switzerland's 2022-adopted system.

"The study is monothematic and ignores important factors such as trust in the healthcare system."
A staggering data discrepancy has emerged that threatens to complicate the narrative of Switzerland's medical future. While the nation prepares to shift to an opt-out organ donation system, a groundbreaking study published in Pnas Nexus reveals a critical flaw in the logic of presumed consent. The numbers are jarring: while opt-out systems successfully increase deceased donations by an average of 1.21 per million inhabitants, they simultaneously trigger a plummet in living donations by a massive 4.59 per million.
This is not merely a statistical blip; it is a profound policy paradox. For every one additional deceased donor gained through legislation, the system appears to inadvertently discourage nearly four living donors from stepping forward. The implication is stark: by institutionalizing the act of giving after death, the state may be eroding the culture of altruistic giving during life. As Switzerland navigates this ethical minefield, the data suggests that the 'silent' consent of the dead may be silencing the active generosity of the living.
The warning comes not from theoretical models, but from hard historical data spanning 24 countries. The research paints a picture of unintended consequences that Switzerland cannot afford to ignore. The mechanism at play appears psychological as much as it is logistical. In nations where the state assumes ownership of the decision, the individual urgency to contribute actively—to donate a kidney or liver segment to a relative or stranger—seems to evaporate.
This creates a precarious deficit. Living donations are often medically superior, offering better outcomes for recipients compared to cadaveric organs. If the global trend holds true for the Swiss Confederation, the net volume of available organs could face unexpected pressure, despite the legislative intent to boost numbers. The study serves as a flashing red light for policymakers: changing the law is easy, but maintaining the public's active engagement in saving lives is a far more volatile variable.
Facing these alarming statistics, Swisstransplant Director Franz Immer is pushing back with force. He cautions against allowing raw numbers to dictate the narrative before the Swiss system has even launched. Immer dismisses the study's conclusions as "monothematic," arguing that the researchers have failed to account for the most critical currency in Swiss healthcare: trust.
According to Immer, the correlation between opt-out laws and declining living donations ignores the nuance of public confidence in the medical system. He argues that Switzerland's unique cultural and medical landscape cannot be seamlessly compared to every other jurisdiction in the 24-country study. For Swisstransplant, the priority remains clear: the system is not just about legal defaults, but about communication. Immer insists that jumping to negative conclusions now—years before implementation—is a strategic error that could undermine public confidence unnecessarily.
The clock is ticking, but slowly. Although Swiss voters decisively backed the system change in 2022, the extended opt-out solution will not come into force until 2027 at the earliest. This delay provides a critical window for the Confederation to address the concerns raised by the Pnas Nexus findings. The stakes are incredibly high: currently, the approval rate for organ donation hovers around 40%. Immer projects that under the new system, this figure must—and will—surge to approximately 60%.
This transition period is now more than just an administrative rollout; it is a battle for public perception. The authorities must navigate a delicate path: enforcing the new 'presumed consent' standard while vigorously campaigning to ensure living donors do not feel their role has been made redundant. Switzerland is poised on the edge of a major medical shift, and the world is watching to see if the Swiss model can defy the global statistics and secure a net gain in saved lives.