Prioritizing Early Disease Intervention
Author(s)
Caicedo, H. H.; Darrow, Jonathan J.; Caicedo, Julio C.; Pentland, Alex
Download43441_2023_569_ReferencePDF.pdf (340.1Kb)
Open Access Policy
Open Access Policy
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Abstract
Scholars and practitioners have described how investing in health care earlier rather than later can be beneficial, from how “biomarkers” offer promise for early disease detection to healthcare system “incentives” that can promote early preventive medicine. Work by health economists has also made clear that the “health capital” of an individual depreciates over time in the absence of investments in health. Yet, our current policy makers and healthcare system continue prioritizing care of late-stage complex symptomatic illness, often when cure is impossible and disease reversal is improbable, thus exacerbating public health burdens. Critically missing are predicates to address this challenge include the following: first, identifying and validating the specific set of presymptomatic biomarkers that will inform the most appropriate intervention timing for those medical conditions amenable to early intervention; second, shifting fundamental health economic incentives to influence the appropriate disease prevention market; and third, formulating and executing a viable economic framework of reimbursement. We examine these predicates and propose actionable policy recommendations that may help align stakeholder interests to improve public health.
Date issued
2023-09-05Department
MIT Connection Science (Research institute)Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Citation
Caicedo, H. H., Darrow, Jonathan J., Caicedo, Julio C. and Pentland, Alex. 2023. "Prioritizing Early Disease Intervention."
Version: Author's final manuscript