Showing posts with label Catherine Windels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catherine Windels. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 08, 2013

EMHN 10: Forum on Asia's Ageing Societies, Bangkok

This coming October 23, 2013, or a day after the Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia conference on October 21-22, same venue Plaza Athenee Bangkok, the Emerging Markets Health Network (EMHN, http://emhn.org/) and the Global Coalition on Aging (GCOA, http://www.globalcoalitiononaging.com/) will jointly sponsor a small, half-day Policy Dialogue on “Free Market Perspectives on the Challenge of Asia’s Aging Societies”.

The guest speaker will be Professor Anindya Mishra of India, who has written on health care for the International Policy Network (IPN) in the past.  He will present a paper, not just a powerpoint, then an open forum and sharing of ideas and observations about the issue. All participants – from China, Hong Kong, India, Mongolia, Philippines, Thailand, US, other Asian countries -- are free marketers, so it will be a fast and dynamic discussion, covering not just healthy ageing but also universal health care (UHC) policies in many Asian countries. 

EMHN is a new policy centre or think tank designed to help emerging markets address their health challenges by exploring the potential of markets and the private sector. It is a new project of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (IDEAS, http://ideas.org.my/) in Malaysia and was created to  January this year, the network has produced this book, published in India.

GCOA is a new international coalition focused on engaging public policy discussions to help people have active and healthy ageing. It is encouraging policy dialogues in many parts of the world, as an estimated number of 450 million people worldwide will be 65 years or older just 20 years from now, a big number.

Minimal Government Thinkers, Inc. is a member of the EMHN. Our first regional meeting was held in Penang, Malaysia in early September 2012. This will be the second meeting of the network, its friends and allies. Thanks to GCOA and good friend Cathy Windells, President of The Policy Workshop, for organizing this event with EMHN partners and friends.  

The event is a small group discussion and by invitation only, not open to the public.
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See also:
EMHN 6: Fake Medicines in Asia, February 15, 2013
EMHN 7: Free Trade Improves Public Health, February 26, 2013 
EMHN 8: Brand Protection and Safe Medicines, March 06, 2013 

EMHN 9: Private Sector Role in India UHC, April 10, 2013

Thursday, March 08, 2012

Healthy Ageing 2: World Congress on Healthy Ageing

Healthy ageing is one of my important goals in life as I approach my 5th decade in this planet, and as my young daughters are growing up. I got married late, I need to keep a healthy body to prepare for my kids' future, with the help of my wife of course. I may not become rich after all, I have been rather lousy on expanding my personal finance, but I wish to remain healthy, and so far I have been successful in this.

I think healthy ageing is everyone's dream, except those who have adopted a defeatist attitude, either by emotional or biological constraints, and wish to move to the other life soon. To live a long and peaceful life, away from crippling diseases, especially those that can be prevented or controlled via healthy lifestyle, until human biology says that time is up.

I was happily surprised to hear from a good friend, Catherine Barr Windels, that there is now a Global Coalition on Ageing (GCA), http://www.globalcoalitiononaging.com/), and she's actively involved in it. Cathy is also the President of The Policy Workshop CapitalHQwww.capitalhq.com.

Looking at the GCA website, I find this description rather cool:
The Global Coalition on Aging is committed to a vision where innovative market solutions enabled by progressive public policy create a framework for healthy and active aging. We will shape the public discussion on how policymakers, businesses and society at large can comprehensively address these new demographic realities and apply innovative solutions that recognize the opportunity of global aging.
Innovative market solutions, free market approach to healthy ageing, I like that. Now here's another eye opener for me. There are country association on healthy ageing, like the Malaysian Healthy Ageing Society (MHAS). I have not heard yet of such society or organization in the Philippines yet. Probably soon.

MHAS, probably in partnership with GCA, is organizing the 1st World Congress on Healthy Ageing,  http://www.healthyageingcongress.com/index.php.


This is cool. And the description clearly says it,
Healthy ageing is one of the major challenges for the world. The consequences of the demographic transition will have a tremendous impact on economy, health, social development and welfare of societies. Consequently, there is a need to enhance our knowledge about the promotion of good health among young and older people for a better quality of life in its later stages. Healthy ageing fostered by systematically planned health promotion efforts, was mentioned as early as 1998 as Target 5 in the WHO policy "Health for All in the 21st Century". Active ageing (according to the European Commission) includes life-long learning, working longer, retiring later and more gradually, being active after retirement and engaging in capacity-enhancing and health-sustaining activities. 
These are all lifestyle-change related, "healthcare is mainly personal responsibility" philosophy. So what is the role of government here? My bias towards limited or minimal government philosophy says leaving the various markets in healthcare -- health insurance, medicine innovation, healthcare (including hospitals/clinics) competition -- to offer various services to the aged and their family will do the trick. Since governments will still intervene no matter how we caution against such move, then government role should be limited to controlled subsidies to healthcare of the senior citizens.

Responsible people have their own savings, or have responsible family members, friends and relatives, or have network with health NGOs, civic and private charity organizations who can help them out.

Lifestyle-related diseases and hence, unhealthy ageing can be managed if not controlled. I salute these private initiatives like the GCA and the forthcoming 1st Global Congress. The various health departments or ministries of national governments, including the WHO and other multilateral agencies, should assure these private NGOs and civil society organizations (CSOs) that their intervention to "innovative market solutions" should be kept to the minimum, including taxation of health-related goods and services.

Btway, there will be one Filipino physician/scientist who will be among the panel speakers in that global conference, Dr. Antonio Dans, of the UP College of Medicine. Dr. Dans' papers on NCDs, like those published in The Lancet, are well-quoted by the DOH and WHO here.
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See also:
Healthy Ageing 1: The Caregiver Village, February 13, 2012
Lifestyle Diseases 6: Personal Care against NCDs, October 14, 2011
Lifestyle Diseases 7: Drinking and Healthcare, October 18, 2011
Lifestyle Diseases 17: On Cancer, COPD and NCD Risk Factors, March 05, 2012

Lifestyle Diseases 18: Addressing NCDs via Preventive Healthcare, March 05, 2012