How can research stem the tide of the NCD pandemic?

Governments should consider long-term investments in high-quality peer-reviewed implementation research to tackle the growth of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in developing countries.

How countries are failing to integrate people with mental illness into society

In opening The Economist's summit on The Global Crisis of Depression in 2014, Kofi Annan, former UN secretary-general, said: "Depression must become a global priority because it not only affects health and well-being but also diminishes labour productivity and economic growth. Calling the challenge of depression a global crisis is no exaggeration at all." The urgency to address this growing societal crisis has not diminished since then. However, research from The Economist Intelligence Unit highlights major deficits in policies to integrate the mentally ill into society.

Developing countries are ill-equipped to manage the growing chronic-disease burden

As World Health Day is celebrated around the globe on April 7th, the rising burden of chronic diseases in developing countries must become a priority for global health policy. Healthcare systems in many developing countries have evolved to cope with the burden of infectious diseases and to improve child and maternal health. There is now a pressing need to include the prevention and management of chronic diseases in these systems, requiring new thinking on how such medical services are financed.

How to quantify investment in health leaders

Now, more than ever, the value of investment needs quantification. How much exactly does X change with Y and for how long? Is it possible to quantify the value of leadership training in health outcomes? How much should be invested in leadership? A core part of health interventions are the professionals that deliver them. These are the people who connect service with patient, with intervention and ultimately with health outcomes. Does building leadership capacity to manage change processes add any value to quality-improvement strategies?

Encouraging policy action to address the psoriasis challenge

This report examines how health systems in Europe and Canada are responding to the World Health Organisation’s support for worldwide action against psoriasis, an autoimmune disease. The findings of this report are based on research by The Economist Intelligence Unit and include insights from leading psoriasis experts in academia and the medical profession as well as patients and patient association leaders.

Encouraging policy action to address the psoriasis challenge

Encouraging policy action to address the psoriasis challenge

This report examines how health systems in Europe and Canada are responding to the World Health Organisation’s support for worldwide action against psoriasis, an autoimmune disease. The findings of this report, commissioned by Eli Lilly and Company, are based on research by The Economist Intelligence Unit and include insights from leading psoriasis experts in academia and the medical profession as well as patients and patient association leaders.

Confronting obesity in Kuwait

Kuwait lies near the epicentre of the global obesity crisis. The Gulf region has some of the highest obesity levels in the world, and Kuwait and neighbouring Qatar have alternately topped the regional table.

 

Confronting obesity in Jordan

The Kingdom of Jordan, which is increasingly becoming a medical-tourism destination for metabolic surgery, is contending with its own obesity problem at home.

 

 

Confronting obesity in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia finds itself at the centre of a public-health crisis that has made the Arabian Gulf region an outlier among developed countries. The region has some of the highest levels of obesity in the world. In countries such as Saudi Arabia—where oil wealth led to dramatic changes in lifestyle earlier than in other Gulf states such as Oman—the crisis is especially acute. 

 

Enjoy in-depth insights and expert analysis - subscribe to our Perspectives newsletter, delivered every week