Healthcare perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Bringing healthcare to hard-hit areas in Bangladesh

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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

Diagnosing and treating disease

The power of data

Fixing Asia's food system

What will Asian food systems look like in 2030? There is no simple answer to this question, because Asia encompasses a complex mix of countries, divided by borders, policies, cultures, uneven development and other socioeconomic differences. There is no single “Asian” food system, and Asia cannot be analysed as a single entity. 

Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away

The study looks in detail at the disease burden as well as the economic and social burden of lung cancer in the region. The Economist Intelligence Unit developed a model to provide insight into the economic impact of lung cancer in the 12 study countries in Latin America.

Linking patient health data is a huge opportunity for the UK

Digital health is such a big topic at the moment. For instance, there are questions about the interoperability of the systems of different health providers and there is much interest in how apps can help patients monitor their disease. What are your thoughts on how the UK can better use this technology?

Infographic - Optimising Czech Healthcare: Completing the transition

Optimising Czech Healthcare: Completing the transition

Executive summary

In the three decades since the collapse of the Iron Curtain, the Czech Republic has made great strides in modernising its healthcare system. It has made the transition from the fully centralised, command economy system of the communist period to a system modelled more closely on those of its neighbours in the EU, which it joined in 2004.

Research capacity in lower-income countries: assessing the status quo

The need to develop and expand research capacity in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) has been recognised for more than 25 years. In 2013 the World Health Organisation stated that it was vital in order to achieve health goals. Yet, despite some progress, there are still strides to take to ensure that research capacity isn’t merely an afterthought or a side effect of other interventions—and many of these strides are attitudinal.

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