APARC Research - Innovation for Healthy Aging
Innovation for Healthy Aging
Research Focus
The Innovation for Healthy Aging is a collaborative research project that seeks to identify and analyze different dimensions of productive public-private collaborations tackling innovation for healthy aging in East Asia. Building upon previous research collaborations, the project focuses on the roles of the government and private sector (both for-profit and not-for-profit).
The research encompasses three areas:
First, it explores collaborative governance in China and the United States, focusing on an important—and perhaps surprising—feature of policy efforts shared by the two countries, namely, public-private collaboration to forge prosperous, stable futures for their citizens. This study will result in a published volume co-authored with Harvard University professors Richard Zeckhauser and John Donohue (tentative title: Private Roles for Public Goals in China and the United States: Contracting, Collaboration, and Delegation). In addition to health care and elderly care, the book will include research into public and private roles in governance of multiple other sectors, including education, transport infrastructure, affordable housing, social services, and civil society.
Second, it investigates public-private roles and institutional innovation for healthy aging in China. This study analyzes the net value of hypertension control in China, applying a specific empirical methodology using data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey, the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, and detailed patient-level data from the Zhejiang provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention for patients with hypertension in Tongxiang and Ningbouses. The data focuses on roles and incentives of public and private providers, patients, and insurers in controlling hypertension in China.
Third, it assesses public-private roles and institutional innovation for healthy aging in Taiwan. This study examines the roles of public and private hospitals in managing cancer patients in Taiwan, especially in using precision health and personalized medicine technologies.
Payers and regulators in health care are confronting rapid technology changes, but there is little Asia-specific evidence to guide their way. The Innovation for Healthy Aging project will make valuable contributions to the policy debates about precision medicine and healthy aging in East Asia, and to policy audiences working on proactive response to population aging in China, Taiwan, and comparable economies, particularly since hypertension and cancer are two of the most common chronic diseases.
Karen Eggleston
Stanford Collaborators
Other Collaborators
Publications
Valuing Longer, Healthier Lives: Assessing the Productivity of Health Spending in South Korea
East-West Center, 2023
See also How South Korea Can Become a Global Pioneer in Productivity Health Spending, APARC website, March 2023
Projecting Prevalence of Frailty and Dementia and the Economic Cost of Care in Japan From 2016 to 2043
The Lancet Public Health, April 2022
See also Japanese Population Projected to Live Longer Without Dementia, APARC website, April 2022
Educational Gradients in Disability Among Asia’s Future Elderly: Projections for the Republic of Korea and Singapore
Asia Development Review, April 2022
See also Education Level Will Widen Disparity in Health Outcomes of the Future Elderly Population, New Study Projects, APARC website, April 2022
The Dragon, the Eagle, and the Private Sector: Public-Private Collaboration in China and the United States
By John D. Donahue, Karen Eggleston, and Richard J. Zeckhauser, Cambridge University Press, 2021
See also New Book Reveals How China and the United States Engage the Private Sector to Deliver Public Goods, APARC Website, March 2021
Future Projection of the Health and Functional Status of Older People in Japan
Health Economics, July 2020
See also Researchers Develop New Method for Projecting Future Wellness of Aging Populations, APARC website, July 2020
Healthy Aging in Asia
By Karen Eggleston (ed.), published by the Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, May 2020
See also New Book Highlights Policy Initiatives and Economic Research on Healthy Longevity Across Asia, APARC Website, June 2020
Karen Eggleston Examines China’s Looming Demographic Crisis, in Fateful Decisions
APARC website, February 2020
Economic Dimensions of Personalized and Precision Medicine in Asia: Evidence from Breast Cancer Treatment in Taiwan
Chapter in Ernst Berndt, Dana Goldman, and John Rowe (eds.), Economic Dimensions of Personalized and Precision Medicine, University of Chicago Press, 2019
Smoking, Life Expectancy, and Chronic Disease in South Korea, Singapore, and the United States: A Microsimulation Model
Health Economics, November 2019
See also Illustrating the Health Effects of Smoking Reduction, APARC website, December 2019
Understanding "Value for Money" in Healthy Ageing
Chapter in the ebook Live Long and Prosper? The Economics of Ageing Populations, Centre for Economic Policy Research, October 2019
See also Pricing the Priceless: Measuring the Value of Healthy Aging, APARC website, November 2019
Financing Longevity: The Economics of Pensions, Health and Long-term Care Insurance
The Journal of the Economics of Ageing, May 2019
See also Financing Longevity: Addressing the Challenges of an Aging World, APARC website, May 2019
Facing the Demographic Tidal Wave: Collaborative Solutions for an Aging World
Shorenstein APARC website, October 2018
Shorenstein APARC website, August 2018
Related Events
Public-Private Partnerships for Effective Healthcare: Theory and Practice
2020-21 Colloquium series
Private Roles for Public Goals in China and the U.S.: Contracting, Collaboration, and Delegation
October 2018
Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) in Health and Long-term Care in China
October 2018
Financing Longevity: The Economics of Pensions, Health, Long-Term Care, and Disability Insurance
Apri 2017