Healthcare perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Bringing healthcare to hard-hit areas in Bangladesh

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Value-based healthcare in Europe: Laying the foundation

Value-based healthcare looks at health outcomes of treatment relative to cost. In this particular report The EIU examines the way in which value is interpreted across the continent, the extent to which European countries are adopting cost-effectiveness as a key criterion for assessing it, and the efforts to develop new models for pricing innovation.

Further reading:

Value-based healthcare in the UK: A system of trial and error

Value-based healthcare looks at health outcomes of treatment relative to cost. In this particular report The EIU examines the structure of UK healthcare delivery, the unique model used by its health technology assessment (HTA) agencies, and its history of experimentation in value-based pricing.

Value-based healthcare in the UK: A system of trial and error

Value-based healthcare looks at health outcomes of treatment relative to cost. In this particular report The EIU examines the structure of UK healthcare delivery, the unique model used by its health technology assessment (HTA) agencies, and its history of experimentation in value-based pricing.

Further reading:

Women’s health and well‐being

This research is based on surveys with female consumers and public officials in five selected countries (France, Germany, India, Mexico and Brazil), as well as extensive desk research and in-depth interviews with 27 individuals with expertise in the topics under study.The research reaches the following key findings:

Ascending cloud: The adoption of cloud computing in five industries

In a series of content pieces, The EIU reveals the results of its survey of senior executives to uncover cloud computing's growth potential across five key industries: banking, retail, manufacturing, education and healthcare.

To download the executive summary, click .

Ascending cloud - the adoption of cloud computing across five industries

An Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) global survey of 360 technologists and senior executives predicts that cloud’s importance in multiple industries will increase almost 400% in the next five years. This high rate of growth is expected to be found in all of the industries, and in both developed and developing countries.

Ascending cloud: The adoption of cloud computing in five industries

Cloud computing has clearly become a driving force in the information technology world. Over 90% of global enterprises report using cloud as part of their business.1 With over $33 billion in projected 2015 spend, cloud is now the largest category in IT infrastructure budgets.2

But every industry has its unique technology dynamics. Therefore, to understand the future of cloud computing you need to understand its dynamics in key industries.

Ascending cloud - the role of cloud computing in the new doctor-patient relationship

The power dynamics of healthcare are shifting. To date, healthcare providers have been the source and gatekeeper for all information about a patient’s health. Now, though, consumer technology is allowing individuals to measure their own health in greater detail, and therefore play more of an informed role in their own treatment.

Confronting obesity in the UK

A commitment to investment in a multistranded programme and the cultural change needed to support it will be necessary to enable obesity services in the UK to live up to their potential.

 

Further reading:

Confronting obesity in the Netherlands

Although the incidence of overweight and obesity among its population is lower than the European average, the country combines approaches focusing on both lifestyle and chronic-disease management of the condition that have contributed to one of the lowest and most stable obesity rates in Europe: 11.1% of Dutch adults were estimated to be obese in 2013, according to figures from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), compared with an OECD average of 15.5%.

 

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