Singapore: Moving into the e-health elite

Thanks to a major e-health initiative, Singapore, already a healthcare leader in Asia, may soon join the short list of countries with nationwide electronic health records. In April 2011, Singapore launched the first phase of its National Electronic Health Record (NEHR) system, which by June 2012 will link all of the country’s public healthcare institutions, as well as a number of community hospitals, general practitioners and long-term care facilities, to a central repository of electronic patient information at a cost of S$176m (US$146m).

Health Records in Europe

The EU is addressing the lack of interoperability among electronic health records on a multinational level. According to the European Commission, “The deployment of eHealth technologies in Europe can improve the quality of care, reduce medical costs and foster independent living, including in remote places. … To exploit the full potential of new eHealth services, the EU needs to remove legal and organisational barriers, particularly those to pan-European interoperability.” The Digital Agenda for Europe, proposed in May 2010, aims to do that.

Does it work? Does that matter?

Perhaps the most visible element of mHealth is the profusion of phone apps, especially ones related to fitness and wellness. Tens of thousands are already available, and different market research firms have issued predictions for global downloads in 2012 that vary widely from just over 40 million to nearly 250 million.

Pictet Asset Management

In 2002, Pictet Asset Management (PAM), the investment business of Pictet & Cie, one of the largest Swiss private banks, decided to create a separate risk function. Set up by Gianluca Oderda, head of risk control, it has demonstrably saved the business from investment losses while proving an attractive selling point to PAM's institutional investors, which provide the bulk of its SFr122bn (US$100bn) in assets.

The use of market data

One particular type of data that life sciences companies have grown increasingly interested in is market data: 27% have moved towards basing decisions about product development more on the likelihood of market adoption and 30% expect to do so in the next three years. Overall, nearly six in ten fi rms believe that using data to model market trends would be of significant use in shaping innovation strategy.

Want to boost green thinking? Apply a little behavioural science

Today, businesses ignore sustainability and green issues at their peril. According to nearly 40% of our survey respondents (60% in France and 43% in China), consumers today would like to see companies reduce their carbon footprint on products and services. The issue is more important, they say, than designing cheaper, better value or more reliable products. But consumers themselves have a big role to play in reducing greenhouse emissions—not simply in the product choices they make, but in being aware of their own behaviour, especially regarding energy consumption.

Going slow on the information superhighway

One of the hottest topics in healthcare is integrated care. More than 20% of Americans, for example, suffer from more than one chronic condition, such as diabetes, arthritis or heart disease. Potentially, they will have several doctors. But they do not have access to all their medical records, and may lack the knowledge to be able to convey details of their treatments to every medical professional who treats them.

An abundance of patents

The generation of patents is an important—although certainly not the only—pointer to the innovative impulse of a country’s IT sector. For this reason, it is a heavily weighted indicator in the R&D category of the Economist Intelligence Unit’s index model. It has also been a difficult indicator to measure, because until recently most countries’ patent applications could not be attributed to any particular sector.

From zero to a billion

When Deutsche Telekom unveiled its latest strategy update earlier this year, the company talked aplenty about expanding its broadband and data services operations. But a newer focus was also to increase its role in intelligent networks. Still in their infancy, such networks earn operators almost nothing today. By 2015, however, Deutsche Telekom expects them to be contributing €1bn in sales (see chart).

TIBCO Software: Niche services, broad opportunities

TIBCO Software is an American provider of infrastructure software that enables companies to capture and process time-sensitive information, aiding their decision-making processes. Asia contributes about 10% of TIBCO’s global revenues, and is the firm’s fastest-growing region today, with year-on-year revenue growth of 45% in 2010.

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