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Bringing healthcare to hard-hit areas in Bangladesh

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2015 Quality of Death Index

The UK ranks first in the 2015 Quality of Death Index, a measure of the quality of palliative care in 80 countries around the world released today by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). Its ranking is due to comprehensive national policies, the extensive integration of palliative care into the National Health Service, a strong hospice movement, and deep community engagement on the issue. The UK also came top in the first Quality of Death Index, produced in 2010.

2015 Quality of Death Index

Tackling chronic illness with smart devices

Could smart healthcare products hold the key to better quality of life for people living with chronic illnesses?

Mind the gap

Why do health financing strategies need to be more than just innovative? Health financing remains a global issue, with donor countries continuing to play an important role as part of a holistic financing strategy, argues Nouria Brikci, a health economist at international development consultancy, Oxford Policy Management.

Healing with data

Analysing growing volumes of medical data could be the key to containing our ballooning healthcare costs. But will patients be willing to share?

Medical robotics on the nanoscale

“Nanobots” that swim in the bloodstream and target disease areas could be the first radically new approach to medicine in over a century

Careless prescriptions: Why we should be worried about the use of antibiotics

Inappropriate prescription of antibiotics wastes money and accelerates the evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, warns Simon Trace, CEO of Practical Action, an international development charity.

Death’s Long Shadow: Finding A Better Way Out

Across the world, the question of whether or not people should have the right to end their own lives is gaining attention. An equally important question is how to extend the right kind of care to people living in pain and distress or with incurable conditions. And while progress is being made, we are still failing to meet this basic human need.

Governments in Asia-Pacific struggle to adapt to rising chronic disease burden

UK tops EIU’s Quality of Death Index

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