SWICA is committed to high-quality, efficient care that puts people first. To achieve this, we work with a wide range of healthcare partners, including hospitals, networks of doctors, pharmacies, our innovative santé24 online practice and educational and political institutions, to create a system that rewards quality of care over sheer quantity.
What makes collaboration so important in healthcare? How do patients benefit? And what do Winterthur Cantonal Hospital (KSW), Medbase and SWICA contribute to the health of the city’s population by joining forces? Professor Stefan Breitenstein, Chief Medical Officer at KSW, Marcel Napierala, CEO of Medbase, and Professor Eva Blozik, Head of Care Management at SWICA, discuss this in the latest episode of SWICA Talks.
Our aim is healthcare that brings genuine added value – for patients, medical professionals and society at large. It’s not the effort that counts, but the outcome.
We promote transparency and measurable results, working in tandem with innovative partners who make quality visible and tangible.
Healthcare must be effective and affordable. To achieve this, we rely on intelligent cooperation, shared responsibility and clear quality objectives.
Around 1 million women in Switzerland are currently going through menopause. During this transformative time, they often do not know where to get medical support. The newly founded myMeno Insel program by SWICA and the Bern Women’s Clinic offers holistic care. Prof Dr med. Petra Stute, head of the menopause centre at the Inselspital Bern and Michaela Hausmann, doctor at santé24, talk about the joint pilot project, its aim and how important it is to consider the physical, emotional and social aspects of women during menopause.
Encouraging a shift to outpatient care requires innovative thinking, close collaboration within the healthcare system and a commitment from everyone to prioritise patients’ health. Health economist Dr Willy Oggier and santé24 director Dr Oliver Reich discuss this in the latest episode of SWICA Talks.