Predictive Health

How We Can Reinvent Medicine to Extend Our Best Years

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Medical, Specialties, Geriatrics, Science & Nature, Science, Biological Sciences, Biology
Cover of the book Predictive Health by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns, Basic Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns ISBN: 9780465032990
Publisher: Basic Books Publication: October 2, 2012
Imprint: Basic Books Language: English
Author: Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
ISBN: 9780465032990
Publisher: Basic Books
Publication: October 2, 2012
Imprint: Basic Books
Language: English

Our health care system is crippled by desperate efforts to prevent the inevitable. A third of the national Medicare budget—nearly 175 billion—is spent on the final year of life, and a third of that amount on the final month, often on expensive (and futile) treatments. Such efforts betray a fundamental flaw in how we think about healthcare: we squander resources on hopeless situations, instead of using them to actually improve health.

In Predictive Health, distinguished doctors Kenneth Brigham and Michael M.E. Johns propose a solution: invest earlier—and use science and technology to make healthcare more available and affordable. Every child would begin life with a post-natal genetic screen, when potential risk—say for type II diabetes or heart disease—would be found. More data on biology, behavior, and environment would be captured throughout her life. Using this information, health-care workers and the people they care for could forge personal strategies for healthier living long before a small glitch blows up into major disease. This real health care wouldn’t just replace much of modern disease care—it would make it obsolete. The result, according to Brigham and Johns, will be a life defined by a long stay at top physical and mental form, rather than an early peak and long decline. Accomplishing this goal will require new tools, new clinics, fewer doctors and more mentors, smarter companies, and engaged patients. In short, it will require a revolution. Thanks to a decade-long collaboration between Brigham, Johns and others, it is already underway.

An optimistic plan for reducing or eliminating many chronic diseases as well as reforming our faltering medical system, Predictive Health is a deeply knowledgeable, deeply humane proposal for how we can reallocate expenses and resources to prolong the best years of life, rather than extending the worst.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Our health care system is crippled by desperate efforts to prevent the inevitable. A third of the national Medicare budget—nearly 175 billion—is spent on the final year of life, and a third of that amount on the final month, often on expensive (and futile) treatments. Such efforts betray a fundamental flaw in how we think about healthcare: we squander resources on hopeless situations, instead of using them to actually improve health.

In Predictive Health, distinguished doctors Kenneth Brigham and Michael M.E. Johns propose a solution: invest earlier—and use science and technology to make healthcare more available and affordable. Every child would begin life with a post-natal genetic screen, when potential risk—say for type II diabetes or heart disease—would be found. More data on biology, behavior, and environment would be captured throughout her life. Using this information, health-care workers and the people they care for could forge personal strategies for healthier living long before a small glitch blows up into major disease. This real health care wouldn’t just replace much of modern disease care—it would make it obsolete. The result, according to Brigham and Johns, will be a life defined by a long stay at top physical and mental form, rather than an early peak and long decline. Accomplishing this goal will require new tools, new clinics, fewer doctors and more mentors, smarter companies, and engaged patients. In short, it will require a revolution. Thanks to a decade-long collaboration between Brigham, Johns and others, it is already underway.

An optimistic plan for reducing or eliminating many chronic diseases as well as reforming our faltering medical system, Predictive Health is a deeply knowledgeable, deeply humane proposal for how we can reallocate expenses and resources to prolong the best years of life, rather than extending the worst.

More books from Basic Books

Cover of the book The Future Tense of Joy by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Christianity In Jewish Terms by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Under This Beautiful Dome by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book The Human Spark by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Why Beauty Is Truth by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Riding Fury Home by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book The Upside of Down by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Seven Story Tower by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Cataclysm by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Working Toward Whiteness by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book We Don't Need Another Wave by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Smart Mobs by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book A Mathematician Plays The Stock Market by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book The Math Gene by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
Cover of the book Judaism for Everyone by Kenneth L. Brigham, Michael M. E. Johns
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy