Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
book
BookBook
Author Brigham, Kenneth L.

Title Predictive health : how we can reinvent medicine to extend our best years / Kenneth Brigham and Michael M.E. Johns.

Publication Info. New York : Basic Books, [2012]
©2012

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Berlin-Peck Memorial Library - Non Fiction  362.109 BRIGHAM    Check Shelf
 Bristol, Main Library - Non Fiction  362.1 B768    Check Shelf
 Windsor, Main Library - Adult Department  362.10973 BR    Check Shelf
Description xii, 236 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-223) and index.
Contents The challenge and the opportunity. Ponce's dream ; Disease as a medical failure : a transforming paradigm ; Toward exemplary health -- A vortex of discovery. Heath in the age of Omics ; Taming the wild genome ; The epigenome : disparate identities and kinky mouse tails ; Biomarkers and biobanks ; Zip codes and genetic codes ; Cyberhealth/technohealth : realities, fantasies, and myths ; Truth and consequences ; Resonance : research = health care = research = Health care-- --Health vis-à-vis disease : moving the target. The devils we know ; Evidence-based health ; Good drugs : making health pills ; Disrupting medical care : realizing predictive health -- The broader view. The tyranny of paradigm ; Healthy people, healthy planet ; Toward a square wave life -- Life is a fatal condition.
Summary 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 health care: 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 the best science and technology to make health care 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 extend the best years of life, rather than prolonging the worst.
Subject Medicine, Preventive -- United States.
Health behavior -- United States.
Medical policy -- United States.
Health attitudes -- United States.
Added Author Johns, Michael M. E.
ISBN 9780465023127 hardcover alkaline paper
0465023126 hardcover alkaline paper
-->
Add a Review