# Longevity Switzerland is here!

Last week, we launched Longevity Switzerland through a kick-off event at the Google office in Zurich, The Long Game. Here is what happened!

Zurich just got its own longevity community. Last week, the Swiss chapter of Longevity Germany launched at Google HQ, and the room was packed with people who take their health seriously. Here is what happened, why it matters, and what the speakers said that you will actually want to remember.

What is Longevity Switzerland and why does it matter?

It's a growing network of people who treat aging as something to understand and act on, not just accept. The Longevity Germany project has been building local chapters across the German-speaking world, and Switzerland is next. The Zurich night, called The Long Game, was organized together with the Google Developers Group on Campus Zurich.

The format was simple: three talks, a room full of curious people, and the kind of conversation that keeps going long after the official program ends.

Is Preventive Health Actually Becoming the New Normal?

Dr. Elisabeth Roider, MD, PhD, MBA opened with a picture of where the field is heading. Her argument: preventive medicine isn't just a niche trend for biohackers. It is becoming a real shift in how societies think about health.

Right now, most healthcare systems are built to treat disease after it shows up. But a growing body of research suggests that investing in health before something goes wrong is dramatically more effective. A 2023 McKinsey Global Institute report estimated that improving preventive health globally could reduce the global burden of disease by up to 40% by 2040.

Roider's vision goes further than just catching illness early. She described a future where health optimization becomes a cultural norm. Where thriving, not just surviving, is the expectation.

Should You Take Cryopreservation Seriously?

This was the talk no one expected to think about as much as they did.

Dr. Emil Kendziorra, founder of Tomorrow Biostasis, spoke about cryopreservation: the process of cooling a body (or brain) immediately after legal death to preserve it at very low temperatures, in the hope that future medicine might one day be able to repair the damage that caused death and restore the person.

Most people's first reaction is to file this under science fiction. Kendziorra anticipated that.

His argument is probabilistic, not utopian. Here is the core of it: right now, maximum human lifespan has not been extended by a single day. Life expectancy has risen because fewer people die young, not because anyone is living longer at the top end. Death still arrives for everyone.

Given that, what are your options? Burial: zero probability of any future intervention. Cremation: same. Cryopreservation: non-zero probability, however small, that future medicine could repair aging damage, disease, or cellular decay.

He is not claiming it will work. He is saying: given the alternative is zero, a small probability is better than none.

You can disagree with the reasoning. Plenty of people in the room did. But the discussion that followed was exactly the kind of open, honest, philosophically serious conversation that longevity as a field needs more of.

What Does a Real Longevity Clinic Actually Do?

Dr. Natalia Trpchevska, MD, PhD, gave the most practical talk of the evening. She is a physician at AYUN, Switzerland's first walk-in longevity clinic, based in Zurich.

AYUN's approach treats your body as a system, not a checklist. Instead of ticking off lifestyle boxes, they combine:

- Biomarkers (blood tests measuring everything from inflammation to hormonal health)
- Genetics (understanding your personal risk profile)
- CGM (continuous glucose monitoring, a sensor you wear to track blood sugar in real time)
- HRV (heart rate variability, a measure of how well your nervous system recovers from stress)
- AI analysis to find patterns across all of this data that no human could spot manually

The key point Trpchevska made: AI is a tool, not a replacement. Every insight is interpreted and acted on with a medical professional. The goal is to help clients take real ownership of their health, with data they actually understand.

This matters because most people only interact with healthcare when something hurts. AYUN flips that. You go in healthy, you get a detailed picture of where you stand, and you leave with a concrete plan.

Why Does Community Matter for Longevity?

There's a reason every Blue Zone (regions of the world where people consistently live past 100, like Sardinia, Okinawa, and Loma Linda, California) shares one thing regardless of diet or climate: strong social ties.

A 2015 meta-analysis of 148 studies, covering over 300,000 participants, found that social connection reduces the risk of premature death by 50%. That is on par with quitting smoking.

Community events like this one aren't just networking. Surrounding yourself with people who treat health seriously changes your own habits. You talk differently, you share what's working, you ask better questions. The evening at Google HQ was proof of that.

The Longevity Switzerland chapter is just getting started. For Zurich, this was the opening move.

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_Canonical: https://longevity-austria.com/en/articles/longevity-switzerland-is-here · Part of Longevity Cities · Updated 2026-03-16_
