Healthcare perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Bringing healthcare to hard-hit areas in Bangladesh

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The emergence of "ocean risk" and how to tackle it

June 8 marks World Oceans Day. Learn more about the risks and solutions in this piece by Martin Koehring, Managing Editor and Global Healthcare Lead at The Economist Intelligence Unit’s thought leadership division.

Preventative care and behavioural science: the emotional drivers of healthcare decisions

Preventative care and behavioural science

A premise for this research is that decisions on preventative care--from simple safety steps, such as wearing seat belts, to more elaborate diet and exercise regimes, vaccinations, and medical screenings--are typically subject to a variety of psychological influences. Among these are emotional triggers, advice from friends and family, advertising campaigns, and consumers’ personal experiences with particular diseases. These decisions are also subject to a variety of cognitive biases.

Financing and cultivating a sustainable ecosystem for US healthcare innovation

Financing and cultivating a sustainable ecosystem for US healthcare innovation is a report written by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Gilead Sciences, developed to continue the conversation following the Healthcare Forum 2018: Financing healthcare innovation, an Economist event sponsored by Gilead Sciences. It assesses the potential for improving support for US health innovations, across the healthcare spectrum, over the long term.

Building and ensuring an integrated approach to infectious diseases in the US

Building and ensuring an integrated approach to infectious diseases in the US is a report written by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Gilead, developed for distribution following the . It assesses the potential for developing more standardised policy for preventative care and treatment for infectious diseases.

Value-based healthcare: A global assessment

Explore the full value-based healthcare hub here: .

 

Introduction

How the EU is supporting heart health?

Hearts are incredible organs—they beat around 100,000 times per day and pump some 5.5 litres of blood around our bodies every minute.

Time to Scale up Creative Philanthropy!

Approximately 5.6m children, under the age of five, did not survive in 2016. To be more precise, around 15,000 died every day that year.

The Next Pandemic?

This report is based on extensive data analysis and desk research, complemented by five in-depth interviews with experts on NCDs. The main findings of the research are as follows.

Global Heart Health: Evaluating Efforts to Promote Healthy Hearts

Although health systems have made great strides in reducing the toll of cardiovascular disease (CVD) over the past few decades, heart diseases still account for nearly one-third of global deaths. They also create a growing burden on health systems and the wider economy, measured for example in disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), as more people live with heart diseases for longer. As hospitalisation costs rise, there is likely to be growing pressure on health systems to develop adequate prevention and intervention policies to boost heart health. 

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