A misunderstood skin disease: Mapping the policy response to atopic dermatitis

A misunderstood skin disease: Mapping the policy response to atopic dermatitis is a report written by The Economist Intelligence Unit, and sponsored by Pfizer and the International Alliance of Dermatology Patient Organizations (GlobalSkin). It considers the healthcare system approaches and policy responses to the management of atopic dermatitis (AD), often referred to as atopic eczema.

Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away (Spanish)

Please view above a video infographic (in Spanish) summarising the key findings of our "Lung Cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away' report. 

Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away (English)

Please view above a video infographic (in English) summarising the key findings of our "Lung Cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away' report. 

医疗保健的未来:预防性、个性化及精准化

富有和经常全球旅行的人的医疗习惯可以为先进医疗科技融入人们生活的方式提供范例,也可能为科技在未来的广泛采用做下铺垫。为探究这种现象,经济学人智库(The Economist Intelligence Unit/EIU)调查了亚洲、中东及非洲快速发展地区的480位高净值人士(high-net-worth individuals, HNWIs),以探究他们现在的医疗习惯可能会如何推动社会整体上的突破。

数据显示,医疗保健的未来将更加具有预防性、个性化以及精准。同时未来也将不那么专注于治疗,而是更多关注定制个性化生活方式,改变生活习惯以管理个人健康风险、预防疾病。

很多现在的创新都在稳步地推动着这种改变。新的科技正在以前所未有的规模生产着生物特征数据,手机应用、基因检测以及先进的筛查技术只是其中的一部分。大数据分析和人工智能(artificial intelligence, AI)正在运用大量的信息为医护人员及患者提供更深入的分析洞察,以帮助他们更好地设定健康目标及衡量进展。当罹患疾病时,精准医疗、免疫学以及 3D 打印技术方面的突破也为更加个性化的治疗创造了可能。

然而,当医疗科技从有限的运用领域中走向普罗大众时,它们的效用及潜力可能会受到遗留系统、道德争议以及实用性方面的阻碍。

个性化健康选择

诊断和治疗疾病

数据的力量

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. 

Personalising health choices

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