New federal statistics show 55% of women and 44% of men live with chronic illness, while men face higher rates of obesity at 52% compared to 34% of women.

"Weight is not only determined by biological factors, but also by gender-specific norms."
"Womenâs apparent advantage is contrasted by the difference in healthy life expectancy at birth, which is reduced to 0.4 years."
Switzerland is confronting a startling health paradox: women are living longer, but they are not living better. The latest Federal Statistical Office (FSO) data exposes a critical gender divide, revealing that a staggering 55% of women grapple with at least one chronic illness, compared to 44% of men. While women theoretically enjoy a life expectancy advantage of 3.8 years over men (85.4 years vs. 81.6 years), this statistic masks a harsher reality.
When adjusted for health, that advantage evaporates almost entirely. The gap in "healthy life expectancy" plummets to a negligible 0.4 years. This indicates that the additional years women gain are frequently marred by pain and limitation. Women are significantly more likely to report restrictions in everyday activities (30% vs. 24%) and suffer from specific ailments like back or kidney pain. The data paints a picture of endurance rather than vitality, challenging the assumption that longevity equals well-being in the Swiss healthcare landscape.
A majority of Swiss menâ52%âare now classified as overweight or obese, a figure that dominates the 34% rate found among women. Yet, the psychological burden of weight falls disproportionately on the female population. Despite being statistically healthier in terms of BMI, women are far more likely to express dissatisfaction with their bodies (28%) compared to men (23%). This dissatisfaction surges to 52% among overweight women, while only 29% of overweight men report similar unhappiness.
The FSO report suggests this disparity is driven by powerful gender-specific norms. Society continues to enforce a strict "slim ideal" for women, equating thinness with health and beauty, while men are often judged by a standard of physical strength where bulk is more permissible. This cultural pressure creates a toxic environment where women face intense scrutiny regardless of their medical reality, while a significant portion of the male population faces a physical health time bomb without the accompanying psychological distress.
The most alarming figures from the 2022 survey emerge from the realm of mental health, where young women are facing an unprecedented crisis. Among the 15 to 24-year-old demographic, the depression rate for women stands at a shocking 26%âexactly double the 13% rate reported by young men. Across all age groups, women report moderate to severe depression more frequently (12%) than men (8%) and are treated for mental health issues at nearly triple the rate (14% vs. 4%).
Experts point to a convergence of biological and social factors fueling this surge. Beyond hormonal differences, women bear a heavier load of psychosocial stress, including the disproportionate burden of unpaid domestic and family work. Furthermore, women are more frequently the targets of sexism and sexual harassment, stressors that compound over a lifetime. The data serves as a wake-up call: the mental well-being of Switzerland's next generation of women is deteriorating rapidly, demanding immediate systemic attention beyond standard medical treatment.
Historically, men have engaged in riskier lifestyle behaviors, but that gap is closing with remarkable speed. The difference in smoking rates between genders has halved over the last three decades, shrinking from 13% in 1992 to just 6% in 2022. Today, 27% of men smoke compared to 21% of women. Most critically, among the youngest cohort (15-24 years old), the gender divide has vanished entirely, with women smoking just as frequently as men (26% vs. 25%).
This convergence in risk behavior signals a shift in public health challenges. As women adopt risk profiles traditionally associated with men, the healthcare system must prepare for a potential rise in lifestyle-related diseases among the female population in coming decades. Combined with the existing burden of chronic illness, the narrowing of the "vice gap" suggests that the future of Swiss public health will require a nuanced, gender-sensitive approach to preventative care, as the old stereotypes of male vs. female health behaviors become increasingly obsolete.