Indicators are concise summaries of data gathering and processing, which can often be quite complex. Their brevity works well. A patient's insistence on her rights, a researcher's study, a programme manager's appraisal of an intervention, a donor's shift in priorities, or a policymaker's re-allocation of money can all be sparked by indicators. Simple indicators might also be deceptive. Practitioners have long utilised indicators to identify problems with public health and gauge how well they are being handled. However, since the invention of computers, any number of them may be measured. Numerous international declarations and programmes have made the commitment to fulfil objectives for various metrics throughout the past half-decade.






Title : Eliminating implant failure in humans with nanomaterials: 30,000 cases and counting
Thomas J Webster, Brown University, United States
Title : Adoption of Personalized and Precision Medicine (PPM)-guided resources in addressing national biosafety: A green light towards innovations to secure individualized, population, regional and planetary health through personalized nutrition and precision foodomics
Sergey Suchkov, N.D. Zelinskii Institute for Organic Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russian Federation