Healthcare perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Bringing healthcare to hard-hit areas in Bangladesh

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Enabling Telehealth

Key findings include:

  • Ensuring access to telehealth depends not just on the technologies, but on the broader enabling environment, especially policy harmonisation, communications infrastructure, and skills.

Enabling Telehealth

The technologies of telehealth are advancing quickly as part of the ‘connected care’ revolution. Patients and health providers are ever more closely linked through real-time electronic tools. From digital imaging to allow remote viewing of CT scans, through to patient diagnosis, videoconferencing and monitoring, these tools could touch all aspects of the patient-provider relationship.

Value-based healthcare in Spain: Regional experimentation in a shared governance setting

Value-based healthcare in Spain: Regional experimentation in a shared governance setting is an Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report, commissioned by Gilead Sciences. It looks at health outcomes of treatment relative to cost and at the structure of Spanish healthcare delivery, the process of making healthcare more accountable in Spain, and the growth and adoption of value-based measures.

Value-based healthcare in Spain: Regional experimentation in a shared governance setting

Spain’s decentralised National Health System grants financial, planning and management powers to the regional health services of the country’s 17 autonomous communities and two autonomous cities. In addition the regions also have more responsibility for the appraisal of treatments and care pathways, and for final price negotiations with drug manufacturers.

Towards predictive medicine

The potential for real-time information to make healthcare more effective and efficient is considerable. And while adoption is limited to date, some organisations are exploring the possibilities. 

In this video interview, Dr. John Toussaint, CEO ThedaCare Center for Healthcare Value, discusses how his organisation is using real-time information to improve awareness of emerging diseases. 

The future of healthcare in Africa

Why read this report

  • Learn more about the progress on extending health coverage and associated financing reforms in several African countries
  • Discover how technology can help to make healthcare more efficient and accessible on the continent
  • Find out where demand for primary care and outpatient services is rising and why health inequalities remain a problem in many countries

The future of healthcare in Africa

Report Summary

Measuring the soft costs of cybercrime: a hard problem in need of a solution

Cyberattacks come in many forms, and each can entail soft costs of different kinds and magnitudes. Cyberthieves could steal sensitive personal data, taking the trust of current and future customers with them. “Hacktivists” could immobilize a website, causing customer frustration and bad press. Competitors could lift product designs and take over the market with low-cost copies. And hostile nations could disrupt or destroy services and facilities vital to a healthy economy.

What’s in a number? Estimating the cost of cybercrime

If you need to understand property crime in the US, visit the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s website. Its Uniform Crime Report will tell you how many offenses were committed nationally in 2011 (9,063,173) and of what type (burglary 24%, larceny 68% and motor vehicle theft 7.9%). It will also give you an estimate of how much property crime cost the US economy that year ($15.6bn).

Strategies for seasonal influenza

Research Methodology

This report draws on two main sources for its research and findings:

In June 2013, The Economist Intelligence Unit surveyed 418 senior business executives from the US, the UK, Germany, France, Italy and Spain—one-half of whom are from the board or C-level (CEO, CFO, CIO, etc). Twenty industries are represented in this sample, with just over one-quarter (28%) of companies coming from financial services or manufacturing. Around one-half of these companies have more than 500 employees or more than US$500m in annual revenue.

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