诊断和治疗疾病

The future of healthcare

Habits of the wealthy and globally mobile can often provide examples of how cutting-edge healthcare technologies integrate into people’s lives, and may serve as the preliminary stage of widespread future adoption. To explore this phenomenon, The Economist Intelligence Unit recently surveyed 480 high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) across the fast-growing regions of Asia, the Middle East and Africa to study how their current healthcare habits might lead to breakthroughs for society as a whole.

The future of healthcare: Preventative, personalised and precise

Habits of the wealthy and globally mobile can often provide examples of how cutting-edge healthcare technologies integrate into people’s lives, and may serve as the preliminary stage of widespread future adoption. 

To see into the future of healthcare, The Economist Intelligence Unit recently surveyed 480 high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) across the fast-growing regions of Asia, the Middle East and Africa to study how their current healthcare habits might lead to breakthroughs for society as a whole. 

Diagnosing and treating disease

The power of data

Leveraging data to improve governance

Because governance metrics vary among companies and encompass qualitative issues like independence and accountability, investors and boards are still learning how to clearly convey and analyze governance indicators. However, with increased data capabilities, driven by new technologies and a culture of transparency, investors and boards are beginning to better understand and act on governance issues.

Fundamentals of governance

Navigating regulatory shifts with better data

In the first half of 2018, two major data-related EU regulations—the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II), which went into effect in January, and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which will be implemented on May 25th—are changing how financial services firms manage data. Although legislated in the EU, these two regulations apply to organizations that conduct business in Europe, requiring global firms to come up to speed on compliance.

Meanwhile, other countries face their own regulatory changes and proposals, such as:

Data and Transparency

From navigating regulatory shifts to managing transparency requests, optimising data strategies helps asset owners and asset managers keep up with change. This program explores how institutional investors are utilising new technologies and new processes in areas such as data management and analysis to best serve their stakeholders.

Transforming data into action: The business outlook for data governance

This report, developed by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Collibra, draws on a survey of more than 500 business executives working in North America and Europe in the financial services, healthcare and life sciences, manufacturing, retail and consumer packaged goods, telecommunications and technology industries.

Additionally, we conducted in-depth interviews with corporate leaders and experts in data governance. We would like to thank the following for their insights and contribution to this research:

Optimizing data in a transparent world

Transparency ranks as one of asset owners’ and asset managers’ top concerns, (1) but simply sharing more data between both sides does not always lead to better investment outcomes.

Instead, asset managers need to find a balance between fulfilling external transparency requests and protecting competitively differentiating knowledge, while asset owners need to find a balance between understanding what data they need to reach their investment and fiduciary goals and what data could lead to information overload.

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