Archive for December, 2009

Introducing the Healthy Planet Index: Exploring What Produces Long Happy Lives

Friday, December 4th, 2009 by

Here at HTB we’ve taken an interest in what we’re calling comparative healthcare with an eye toward what we can learn from lifestyles and cultures around the globe.  Now that the healthcare reform debate in Congress is reaching a crescendo, we think it’s a good time to ask this: “How do you measure the effectiveness of a healthcare system?”

We think there are two fundamental dimensions that should be considered.  While there is no doubt about the importance of physical health, “well-being” includes happiness too.  To gauge the strength of a healthcare system, we need to somehow measure both.  A population’s health can be gauged by life expectancy, but we have to look harder to find a measure of a population’s happiness.

For this reason, we literally took a page from The Happy Planet Index which respected economists have devised to measure and rank how efficiently (in terms of environmental impact) nations produce “the good life.”  This ranking relies on life expectancy figures and surveys of life satisfaction, as well as a country’s carbon footprint.  We focused on the first two numbers to isolate what they call “Happy Life Years” of the citizens in each country.  The result is a ranking of countries that emphasizes a basic human goal: long, happy years of life. The accompanying chart shows the results for 25 of the 141 countries we evaluated. (Happy life years are determined by multiplying life expectancy and satisfaction with life.)

There are some surprises: Costa Rica heads the list; the U.S. comes in 14th with Mexico not far behind. China and Egypt rank far ahead of Turkey and Russia.  But we were even more surprised when we tried to find variables that correlate with Happy Life Years.

A quick scan of the chart confirms our statistical analysis that there is very little correlation between Happy Life Years and the number of doctors per capita.  This finding calls to mind Voltaire’s maxim that the role of a doctor is “to amuse the patient while nature takes its course.”  Of course, the geographic distribution of doctors and medical technology (i.e., access to care, maybe the sheer size of the country) must play a very large role.

Likewise, government’s share of spending on healthcare exhibits almost no correlation with Happy Life Years.  Even when the dependent variable is reduced to life expectancy, the results still indicate that there is no relationship between how involved the government is and how healthy the people are.  Clearly there are no simple conclusions to be drawn and rationally applied to cool the heated discourse that is unfolding in Congress.

We did find something worth remembering when we looked at total healthcare spending per capita.  Here the relationship between Happy Life Years and how much is spent per person is not what one might expect.  There is a positive correlation with the Happy Life Years; however, the relationship is logarithmic, rather than linear.  This means that there are rapidly diminishing returns on spending.  Our analysis shows that spending $1,000 per person per year rather than $500 can have a huge effect, but spending $3,000 per person rather than $2,500 is not very meaningful.  This finding calls into question the benefits of increased spending — certainly at the levels the U.S. has attained ($6,714 per person).  Are these costs truly necessary?  If not, what are we paying for that is not as essential as we think?  

There is, of course, a moderate correlation with Gross Domestic Product (GDP), but that’s not the end of the story. We’ll continue to wrestle with this topic to gain more insight into how important variables such as environment (air and water quality) and culture (drinking, smoking, obesity, hunger, attitudes toward work, leisure, prison population, size of military force) affect a country’s score.    In the meantime, let’s consider how redistributing some healthcare spending might raise the planet’s health quotient.  As we’ve seen, $500 spent on the have-nots goes a long, long way.  For some, it’s a drop in the bucket, for others, it’s the whole kitchen sink.

HPI

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Your Cerebral Leanings – Which Way Do You List?

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009 by

Make a list!I started out today with the task of posting a short note about a cool new use for one’s mobile phone.  As Sarah Perez recently wrote at ReadWriteWeb, STAR Analytical Services received a Grand Challenges Explorations grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to develop software that can make a diagnosis based on the sound of a cough on a mobile phone.  This will be especially useful in countries where mobile phones are rampant but doctors are not.

I thought I would make a quick connection between this mobile application and our posts on the Fitbit Tracker (and here) and telehealth, something vague about the intersection of technology and health care and the exciting new ways our lives will be affected by all this.

However, one twist led to another, and before I knew it, the kernel of an entirely new essay had developed.  As Paul Graham said in an essay titled The List of N Things:

“The main point of essay writing, when done right, is the new ideas you have while doing it. A real essay, as the name implies, is dynamic: you don’t know what you’re going to write when you start. It will be about whatever you discover in the course of writing it. “

It may be more than coincidental, but this essay turns out to be about lists.  The Grand Challenges grant is part of a program that has funded over 300 projects, all focused on a list of 14 major global health challenges.  This list is modeled after the famous list of 23 unsolved mathematical problems that David Hilbert posed back in 1900.  Just as Hilbert’s list encouraged innovation in mathematics research, the Grand Challenges is aimed at “engaging creative minds across scientific disciplines — including those who have not traditionally taken part in health research — to work on solutions that could lead to breakthrough advances for those in the developing world.”

These “unsolved problems” lists are diametric to what Umberto Eco recently wrote about in The Vertigo of Lists: mankind’s desire to catalog and list in an attempt to create order and understanding.  Or are they?  While one consists of questions (Hilbert et. al) and the other of answers (Eco), they mirror each other.  What is implied in a list of unsolved problems are the solved ones.  On the other hand, a “catalog” list is supposed to be all-encompassing, but can it ever be?  Its ostensible completeness is inherently incomplete.

Where is this going?  I have strayed from a relatively concrete concept (analyze the sound of a cough on a cell phone) to an abstract discussion that for me yields a simple conclusion: great things can be achieved through the simple use of lists.  By developing a list of 14 challenges focused on seven goals, the Gates Foundation has succeeded in catalyzing hundreds of projects with contributions from creative minds that had previously never worked on global health issues.

How can we solve the U.S. health care problem today?  Create a list of challenges or objectives, and let creative minds come together to solve them.  These problems will not be solved through legislation in a combative, political arena.  How can we clean up our planet and end war?  Make a list.

Photo by Kristian D. http://www.flickr.com/photos/kristiand/ / CC BY 2.0

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