scholarly journals A Note on Intertemporal Discounting and Nudging

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 24
Author(s):  
Ahmad S. Taleb ◽  
Ameen Talib

Several challenges and rising costs are facing the healthcare industry today. Some of these health costs are a direct consequence of lifestyle choices such as unhealth diets, obesity and smoking. These challenges can be managed if policy makers have the tools to influence and alter people’s behaviour. The conventional tools used for influencing behaviour include legislation, regulation and information provision. Recently, interest has been shown in policies that ‘nudge’ people in particular directions.

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-33
Author(s):  
Ahmad S. Taleb ◽  
Ameen Talib

Several challenges and rising costs are facing the healthcare industry today. Some of these health costs are a direct consequence of lifestyle choices such as unhealth diets, obesity and smoking. These challenges can be managed if policy makers have the tools to influence and alter people’s behaviour. The conventional tools used for influencing be-haviour include legislation, regulation and information provision. Re-cently, interest has been shown in policies that ‘nudge’ people in par-ticular directions.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaun Hargreaves Heap ◽  
Christel Koop ◽  
Konstantinos Matakos ◽  
Asli Unan ◽  
Nina Sophie Weber

Policy makers responding to COVID-19 need to know people’s relative valuation of health over wealth. Loosening and tightening lockdowns moves a society along a (perceived) health-wealth trade-off and the associated changes have to accord with the public’s relative valuation of health and wealth for maximum compliance. In our survey experiment (N=4,618), we randomize information provision on economic and health costs to assess public preferences over this trade-off in the UK and the US. People strongly prioritize health over wealth, but the treatment effects suggest these priorities will change as experience of COVID-19 deaths and income losses evolves. Information also has heterogeneous/polarizing effects. These results encourage policy caution. Individual differences in health-wealth valuation highlight this study’s importance because they map onto compliance with current lockdown measures.


2003 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 27-29
Author(s):  
Maurice Long

“The Health InterNetwork Access Initiative (HINARI), is using information technology to narrow the information gap in health science.” Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations, in his address to the Pan American Health Organization,Washington DC, 2 December 2002. “As a direct consequence of this arrangement, many thousands of doctors, researchers and health policy-makers among others will be able to use the best-available scientific evidence to an unprecedented degree to help them improve the health of their populations. It is perhaps the biggest step ever taken towards reducing the health information gap between rich and poor countries.” Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, Director-General of the World Health Organization, London, 9 July 2001.


Author(s):  
Sheshadri Chatterjee ◽  
Michael S. Dohan

The purpose of the paper is to provide an overview of the issues related to Artificial Intelligence (AI) applications in the Indian healthcare sector and provide input to policy makers. A qualitative approach has been used in this study to identify government initiatives, opportunities and challenges for applications of AI. , and suggests improvements in policy areas relevant to AI in healthcare. The study helps by providing comprehensive inputs for framing policy on AI in healthcare industry in India. The study also highlights that that if the proper actions are taken to overcome the various challenges associated with applications of AI in healthcare sector in India by the government, then the healthcare sector will immensely benefit. This article has taken an attempt to provide inputs concerning to policy initiatives, challenges and recommendations for improving healthcare system of India using different applications of AI.


Journalism ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 1175-1191 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi Zhang

Amid the changing communication environment, there has been a growing interest from practitioners, policy makers, and scholars in harnessing the potential of hyperlocal news to strengthen communities and revitalize the condition for civic action. Hyperlocal news is often taken to signify a form of information provision by and for the community, leaving the boundaries, meaning, and assumed normative value of community unquestioned and uncontended. This article highlights the blind spots in the current research in hyperlocal news and argues that increasing ethnic diversity in local communities requires confronting the challenge of communication in and across difference. Citing empirical evidence from a small multiethnic city, this article argues that the concept of community is ultimately unproductive for positively thematizing the role of hyperlocal news in the context of ethnic diversity, and recasting hyperlocal news as a public discursive realm with differently situated publics points to new normative values and directions for research.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 379-388
Author(s):  
Giannis Adamos ◽  
Eftihia Nathanail ◽  
Irina Yatskiv Jackiva ◽  
Evelina Budilovich Budiloviča ◽  
Maria Tsami

Abstract The present paper aims at measuring the satisfaction of travellers and stakeholders on perceived quality of service provided at the Latvian interchange “Riga International Coach Terminal” and understand whether there are any gaps between the two groups of involved parties, based on their perceptions and expectations. To this end, a travellers’ attitudinal survey was organized and interviews with representative stakeholders were conducted, in order to capture and analyse their attitudes and preferences and extract those attributes that affect their satisfaction. Results showed that the interchange performs well in physical quality attributes, such as travel and wayfinding information provision, but in terms of access and aesthetics expectations in the internal and external design, some contradictory findings were revealed between travellers and stakeholders, validating the fact that understanding users’ perceptions can work as vital input to policy makers’ perceptions of an integrated sustainable public transport system.


Author(s):  
Kimberly Cleveland ◽  
Tracey Motter ◽  
Yvonne Smith

Original Medicare produced an increased index of suspicion regarding health costs in 1965. As services expanded, costs escalated. Policy makers moved to control upward spending trends in an attempt to leverage resources across the population. Changes in reimbursement accompanied by the expansion of levels of care during an episode of illness caused stakeholders to carefully analyze value based opportunities. The groundbreaking Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) compels nurses to continue innovation, transformational leadership, and care coordination as major stakeholders in provision of the next generation of cost containment, quality advances, and patient access improvements. This article discusses the nurse impact on national health cost reduction, value based healthcare reimbursement, and opportunities for nurses to impact healthcare quality. In addition, we consider the nurse impact on healthcare quality and access to care, as well as continued opportunities for nurses to impact access and lead change.


Author(s):  
John Gray

Those who urge governments to make plans for the consistent development and coordination of information provision face many practical difficulties, in particular, serious doubts among senior policy makers whether a national information policy can or should exist. Four main reasons for their attitudes are described and the implications for advocates of planning are discussed. A distinction is drawn between planning and coordination and the possible nature and functions of a national coordinating organization are described, with emphasis on stimulation and financial support of new activities as well as on coordination.


BMJ Open ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. e019662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Crawford S Moodie ◽  
Rosemary Hiscock ◽  
Jim Thrasher ◽  
Garth Reid

ObjectivesTo explore young adult smokers’ perceptions of cigarette pack inserts promoting cessation and cigarettes designed to be dissuasive.DesignCross-sectional online survey.SettingUK.ParticipantsThe final sample was 1766 young adult smokers, with 50.3% male and 71.6% white British. To meet the inclusion criteria, participants had to be 16–34 years old and smoke factory-made cigarettes.Primary and secondary outcome measuresSalience of inserts, perceptions of inserts as information provision, perceptions of inserts on quitting, support for inserts and perceived appeal, harm and trial of three cigarettes (a standard cigarette, a standard cigarette displaying the warning ‘Smoking kills’ and a green cigarette).ResultsHalf the sample indicated that they would read inserts with three-fifths indicating that they are a good way to provide information about quitting (61%). Just over half indicated that inserts would make them think more about quitting (53%), help if they decided to quit (52%), are an effective way of encouraging smokers to quit (53%) and supported having them in all packs (55%). Participants who smoked factory-made cigarettes and other tobacco products (compared with exclusive factory-made cigarette smokers), had made a quit attempt within the last 6 months (compared with those that had never made a quit attempt) or were likely to make a successful quit attempt in the next 6 months (compared with those unlikely to make a quit attempt in the next 6 months) were more likely to indicate that inserts could assist with cessation. Multivariable logistic regression modelling suggested that compared with the standard cigarette, the cigarette with warning (adjusted OR=17.71; 95% CI 13.75 to 22.80) and green cigarette (adjusted OR=30.88; 95% CI 23.98 to 39.76) were much less desirable (less appealing, more harmful and less likely to be tried).ConclusionsInserts and dissuasive cigarettes offer policy makers additional ways of using the pack to reduce smoking.


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