Switzerland: Over 800% Increase in Assisted Suicides

Women, the elderly, and those suffering from physical or mental illness were disproportionally more likely to seek "medically-assisted dying."
GENEVA — In 2023, Switzerland recorded 1,729 assisted suicides among residents, an 8.47% rise from 1,594 in 2022, according to the Federal Statistical Office. Women accounted for 59.92% of cases, with 1,036 women compared to 693 men, continuing a trend where women outnumber men 3:2 in assisted suicides from 2003 to 2023. Studies suggest women’s higher rates of psychiatric disorders, like depression, may contribute.
The elderly dominate these figures, with 90.86% of 2023 cases aged 65 or older, up from 74.33% in 2003. Among those 95 and older, 94.29% of suicides were assisted. Switzerland’s 1941 law permits assisted suicide unless driven by “selfish motives.”
Concerns intensified after a British woman, Anne, secretly ended her life at Pegasos clinic, misleading her family about a holiday. Her death, linked to depression, left relatives devastated, raising fears about secretive assisted suicides. Critics, including Right To Life UK, warn that proposed UK legislation could enable similar outcomes, abandoning vulnerable elderly to “deaths of despair.”