Posts Tagged ‘economist’

“Give it to (the new generation of leaders) right now”; – Tea with The Economist

January 13th, 2010 | Popularity: 3%
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“Give it to (the new generation of leaders) right now” – Tea with The Economist – Interesting stoking of generational change by Bill George near the end of this interview, with attached hopeless comment by the interviewer at the end (“I worry that the old leadership regime will cling on”).

I see/hear that this “out with the old/in with the new” philosophy a lot, and I wonder if baby boomers are selling themselves short.

I have been meaning to write a post about my belief that generational differences are probably overplayed. I’ve amassed quite a few links about this, and point to this article that lends to the idea that the way people think is not tied to their generation as much as people think it is.

See what you think, comments welcome.

A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Mobile marvels | The Economist

October 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 3%
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A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Mobile marvels | The Economist -

“In 2000 the developing countries accounted for around one-quarter of the world’s 700m or so mobile phones. By the beginning of 2009 their share had grown to three-quarters of a total which by then had risen to over 4 billion.”


A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Finishing the job | The Economist

October 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 2%
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A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Finishing the job | The Economist

HOW long will it be before everyone on Earth has a mobile phone? “It looks highly likely that global mobile cellular teledensity will surpass 100% within the next decade, and probably earlier,” says Hamadoun Touré, secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union, a body set up in 1865 to regulate international telecoms. Mobile teledensity (the number of phones per 100 people) went above 100% in western Europe in 2007, and many developing countries have since followed suit. South Africa passed the 100% mark in January, and Ghana reached 98% in the same month. Kenya and Tanzania are expected to get to 100% by 2013.


A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Beyond voice | The Economist

October 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 2%
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A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Beyond voice | The Economist

The Farmer’s Friend service accepts text-message queries such as “rice aphids”, “tomato blight” or “how to plant bananas” and dispenses relevant advice from a database compiled by local partners. More complicated questions (“my chicken’s eyes are bulging”) are relayed to human experts, who either call back within 15 minutes or, with particularly difficult problems, promise to provide an answer within four days. These answers are then used to improve the database.


A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Eureka moments | The Economist

October 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 2%
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A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Eureka moments | The Economist

In the past few years the anecdotal evidence has been backed up by studies that measure the economic impact of mobile phones directly. One example is the analysis of fish prices on the coast of Kerala, in southern India, carried out in 2007 by Robert Jensen, an economist at Harvard University. By examining historical price data as mobile-phone coverage was extended down the coast between 1997 and 2001, Mr Jensen was able to show that access to mobile phones made markets much more efficient. Fishermen could call several markets while still at sea before deciding where to sell instead of taking their catch back to their home market and throwing it away if there were no buyers for it. This eliminated waste, dramatically reduced the variation in prices along the coast, brought down consumer prices by 4% and increased fishermen’s profits by 8%. Mobile phones paid for themselves within two months. Mr Jensen concluded that “information makes markets work, and markets improve welfare.”


A special report on health care and technology: Health 2.0 | The Economist

April 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 13%
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Dr. Ted (he’s not me) | The Economist

April 27th, 2009 | Popularity: 15%
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  • Dr. Ted (he’s not me) | The Economist – Comment from a user of The Economist.com that refers to the Kaiser Permanente study showing a 21.5 % decrease in office visits in Hawaii. (see http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/abstract/28/2/323 ). I agree that the majority of care to Americans is provided in small practices, as well as the idea that physicians who want to perform virtual care find it difficult with today's reimbursement approach. (50% of the reason I’m posting this is to clarify that I’m not this Dr. Ted. I post comments on others’ blogs as “Ted Eytan.”

In Front of the Counter with the Innovation Learning Network

September 25th, 2008 | Popularity: 24%
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One of the (many) groups I am excited to participate with in my new role is the Innovation Learning Network , which “brings together the most innovative healthcare organizations in the country to share the joys and pains of innovation.” Kaiser Permanente is a member, of course, as are many other leading edge American health organizations.

In learning about the Network, I spoke with Scott Heisler, RN, MBA, who works with the Kaiser Permanente Innovation Consultancy. He walked me through the innovation approach used by the consultancy (which by coincidence I read and blogged about right here), and then presented a concept that really interested me – the “in front of the counter / behind the counter” sensation that we sometimes have in health care.

I did a little looking on line and found this on McDonald’s Corporate Responsibility blog:

I couldn’t help but think about the challenges that all of our businesses have – regardless of our industry or size of operations – making the connection with our customers on the environmental improvements we have, and continue, to make. So much of our innovation happens “behind the counter”, so it’s almost invisible to our customers if we don’t proactively communicate it.

I think this is a useful way to think about things, especially when we talk about involving patients. Are we thinking about the front-counter experience in everything we do? Are there times when we inappropriately ask people who are part of the care team (nurses, allied health, other physicians, patients and their families) to be in front of the counter when they should be assisting behind the counter? Or should we change the front of the counter experience in such a way that people don’t have to come behind the counter to support a safe, affordable, high quality care experience?

I then remembered what’s happening with New York City restaurants, and one in particular: when more information was provided to consumers, Le Pain Quotidien learned that this was better business for all of their stores (including Washington, DC) and adjusted things behind the counter to support it.

It’s interesting to think about how working from the front of the counter can create improvement…..Either way, I’m looking forward to following the work of the ILN, and encourage readers from innovative organizations to think about doing the same.

Piracy | Look for the silver lining | Economist.com

July 20th, 2008 | Popularity: 13%
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  • Piracy | Look for the silver lining | Economist.com – I am not drawn to the idea of piracy as a source of innovation as much as the idea that providing knowledge to your competitors spurs innovation. If there's an approach to helping patients be healthy, I want to share it, and vice versa.

My Definition of Health 2.0 : The Transition to Personal, Participatory Health Care

May 2nd, 2008 | Popularity: 55%
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Health 2.0 is the transition to personal, participatory health care. Everyone is invited to see what is happening in their own care and in the health care system in general, to add their ideas, and to make it better every day.

When I went to medical school, a person’s ability to influence the health care system was linearly correlated with the length of their lab coat. Actually, in my medical school, medical students and attending physicians all wore the same length of lab coats, because I trained on the West Coast. I was exposed to the labcoat length protocol when I was a medical student and a new group of residents began training at our hospital. One of the residents was obviously from an East Coast medical school because she asked me permission to do something for a patient, and it took us both a few minutes to realize that she thought I was the “in charge” doctor because I wasn’t wearing a short lab coat. Neither of us wanted to relate in this way, and we transformed the relationship right there, in a beneficial way for our patients.

Flash forward to 2004, when my organization implemented an enterprise wide electronic medical record system for doctors, nurses, and staff. All of a sudden, we were on a common platform, and every member of the team had a contribution to make in each other’s learning of the new system. Once, when I was ordering an injectable medication, a nurse colleague came over to me and said, “here, let me show you how to do that, Ted.” Now, this new technology was creating an obvious platform for colleagues to teach each other, regardless of role. It was and is great.

In 2008, in organizations like ours where patients are regularly participating in the creation of their health record via secure e-mail and online health profiles, and participating in the creation of ideas and their health care stories inside and outside of our health care system, health care improvement is now more democratic than ever. When we combine that with management systems like LEAN (Toyota Management System) that support respect for our customers and our colleagues and use tools like visual systems and daily improvement methods, it is possible to see what the difference between Health 1.0 and Health 2.0 is. The technology has definitely stimulated this change by making it easier to participate, but the lasting intervention will be the participation of patients, their families, and every stakeholder (health care providers, businesses, philanthropies, non-profit associations, etc) in the improvement of our care system.

In 2006, The Economist referred to the transition from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0 as the transition from mass media to personal, participatory media. I think the same is true for Health 1.0 to Health 2.0.

I have spoken about the idea that physicians in my generation (Generation X) are a group that trained during an explosion of medical information. We are a group that is challenging the mental model of “omniscient physician” – we don’t want to hold all the answers for our patients because we’ll fail if we do. We want to learn something new from every patient, every colleague, and every industry, every day, so we can be good educators, too. Now we can, and we are.

Background articles on Web2.0; Data Visualization; A USA-Obesity Slideshow from the CDC

April 14th, 2008 | Popularity: 63%
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Guide to a Second Seat Alaska AirlineI recently pulled several articles to help leaders understand Web2.0 better. That’s what’s in the links below.

The image is one that I snapped while taking a flight recently. It reflects the accommodations an already troubled industry is having to make to support our health (or lack thereof).


First recorded spam; Physician Blogs; Enjoying culture of DC Neighborhoods; Empowering staff; LEAN definitions

December 24th, 2007 | Popularity: 44%
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December 24th: