In a significant public statement, University Hospital Zurich (USZ) CEO Monika Jänicke has thanked the former surgeon who exposed serious irregularities at the hospital's heart surgery clinic, stating the whistleblower deserves 'all our respect'.

"It deserves all our respect."
"The issue of compensation will definitely be included in the analysis of the report."
University Hospital Zurich (USZ) is finally confronting its ghosts. In a stunning reversal of institutional defensiveness, CEO Monika Jänicke has publicly declared that the whistleblower who exposed lethal irregularities at the heart surgery clinic deserves 'all our respect.' This bold admission marks a turning point for Switzerland’s medical establishment, which has long grappled with the fallout of this scandal. The informant, a former heart surgeon at the clinic, was once cast out for raising the alarm; today, his actions are being framed as a service to public health. While Jänicke, who took the helm in 2023, refuses to dwell on the previous administration's decision to fire the surgeon, her gratitude signals a new era of transparency. The hospital now faces the uncomfortable reality that its internal culture once punished the very person who sought to protect patients. This public validation of a whistleblower is unprecedented in the upper echelons of Swiss healthcare, where institutional reputation often takes precedence over individual accountability. The message is clear: the era of silence is over, and the truth, however painful, is now the hospital's primary currency.
A staggering 74 excess deaths haunt the records of the USZ heart surgery clinic. An exhaustive administrative investigation has confirmed that between 2016 and 2020, the clinic recorded a mortality rate significantly above the statistical average. Out of approximately 4,500 surgeries performed during this four-year window, between 68 and 74 more patients died than could have been statistically expected. These are not just numbers; they represent families shattered and a medical system that failed its most vulnerable patients. The data exposes a systemic breakdown in surgical safety and oversight that went unchecked for years. While other clinics maintained standard survival rates, Zurich’s premier heart center became an outlier for all the wrong reasons. The report highlights serious deficiencies that allowed these 'above average' mortality rates to persist. This statistical anomaly is a grim indictment of the clinic's operations during that period, forcing the medical community to ask how such a dramatic spike in fatalities could occur under the nose of one of Europe's most prestigious institutions. The weight of these 74 lives now anchors the ongoing demand for a total overhaul of surgical protocols.
At the dark heart of this scandal lies a critical conflict of interest involving the so-called 'Cardioband.' This heart valve prosthesis was developed by a company in which the then-clinic director, Professor Francesco Maisano, held a financial stake. The investigation suggests a disturbing link between the use of this specific device and the excess deaths highlighted in the report. It raises the alarming possibility that commercial interests were prioritized over patient safety. Maisano, who led the clinic during the years in question, was let go in 2020 and has since relocated to Milan, but the shadow of his tenure looms large over Zurich. The use of the Cardioband under his watch is now the focal point of a probe into medical ethics and corporate greed within the operating room. When a surgeon has a vested financial interest in the tools they use, the sacred trust between doctor and patient is compromised. The USZ must now grapple with how its internal safeguards failed to prevent such a glaring conflict from potentially costing lives. This case serves as a critical warning to the global medical community about the dangers of 'physician-entrepreneurs' operating without rigorous, independent oversight.
The focus now shifts from investigation to restitution. CEO Monika Jänicke has confirmed that the issue of compensation for victims and their families is officially on the table. While she notes it is 'too early' to finalize figures, the admission that reparations 'could become a topic of discussion' is a massive concession for a Swiss public institution. The hospital is currently analyzing the report’s findings to determine the extent of its liability. For the families of the 74 individuals who died beyond statistical expectations, this represents a long-overdue path to justice. Beyond financial settlements, the USZ is under intense pressure to implement unprecedented safety measures to ensure such a catastrophe never recurs. The implications for Switzerland are profound: this case will likely lead to stricter national regulations regarding whistleblower protection and the disclosure of financial interests by medical staff. As the hospital moves forward, it must balance the need to rebuild its reputation with the moral imperative to provide closure to those harmed. The eyes of the nation—and the international medical community—remain fixed on Zurich as it attempts to heal its most critical wound.