Healthcare perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Bringing healthcare to hard-hit areas in Bangladesh

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Well-being is about more than a healthy body…it involves a holistic approach

We are in the midst of shift in the global conversation about how we approach health—expanding the focus beyond treatment and surviving to a broader discussion about thriving and well-being. Investing in women’s gender equality is at the center of this.

The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals: Aiming high for women

When it comes to defining well-being, where a woman stands on the issue can depend on where she sits; specifically, where she sits geographically. Our recent survey, conducted on behalf of Merck Consumer Health, and presented in the recently released study Women’s health and well-being: evolving definitions and practices, finds that definitions of well-being can vary a great deal based on geography and level of economic development.

As the UK ages the cost of disease will increase

What are the challenges ahead for our health services? This infographic will explore how demographic trends, namely an ageing population as well as broad developments in health (eg obesity) will impact the UK healthcare services in the future.

 

 

Devolution and the future of public services

Duncan Sim, Senior Policy and Projects Officer at ResPublica, explores the impact UK devolution will have on the public sector at a time when local authorities are faced with increasing government austerity.

Confronting obesity in Germany

Despite a population in which two-thirds of men and half of all women are overweight or obese and a quarter of the population meets the definition of obese, the government and health insurance system  have yet to introduce a comprehensive strategy or even acknowledge that a serious problem exists, according to experts interviewed for this case study.

Many Asian countries poorly equipped to cope with rapidly increasing incidence of breast cancer according to new EIU report​

Breast cancer in Asia

The regional rise in age-standardised incidence has been running at four to eight times the global average since the 1990s. Meanwhile, the disease is no longer a concern large of developed countries but has become an increasingly important one in many emerging market states, where it is frequently now the most common form of cancer among females.

Breast cancer in Asia: The challenge and response

Understanding China's emerging private healthcare market

Summary

Confronting obesity in France

On the one hand, obesity policy in France has largely emphasised preventive care and behaviour-oriented initiatives, but on the other hand, the insurance system’s policy of fully reimbursing bariatric surgery has given France one of the largest uptake rates for such surgery in Europe.

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