Do you know how many bathroom
scales there are in the UK? Or even how many are sold each year? I don’t. It is
almost impossible to find out unless you are prepared to access pay-walled
market research. Which I’m not! I can tell you that the UK has the largest
market share of bathroom scales sales, but I can’t tell you what that is. I do
know that global sales are estimated to grow to £2.2 billion by the year 2030.
I don’t like not knowing, or not being able to find out, but let’s leave
bathroom scales for a moment and consider the integrated concepts of honesty, happiness
and health.
The worst thing an academic can
do is to have a sexual relationship with one of their students. The second worst
thing an academic can do is to falsify the data they use when publishing a research
paper. Proving that someone has falsified their data can be tricky. It depends
on what the data consists of. I have supervised a few PhD students who have ‘cleaned
up’ the narrative data they have collected. In the main this will have been
done in complete ignorance and can soon be sorted. However, well-established
academics should know better.
So, I was surprised and perhaps a
little dismayed to read of the allegations levelled at a Harvard Business
School professor called Francesco Gino. She has been accused of falsifying
results in several behavioural studies she has used when publishing the outcome
of the studies. No case of deliberately trying to manipulate the outcomes to
suit a particular espoused view has yet been proven. However, in a somewhat
ironic twist, Gino is a professor who studies honesty. What I do know is she is not a happy bunny.
And increasingly, happiness has
grown in importance when it comes
to living a well-balanced life, free
from mental health issues, and improving one’s sense of wellbeing. This year’s
World Happiness Report has been published listing Finland as the happiest
nation and indeed, for the sixth year running! For the fourth consecutive year,
the UK has slipped down the happiness rankings and we are now ranked 19th in
the world. But we are in front of Afghanistan and Lebanon, two of the most
unhappy countries in the world. The report uses an evaluation tool called the
Cantril Scale. This is not a bathroom scale, although I will return to them shortly.
The Cantril Scale looks at a number of factors that might influence the degree
of happiness people feel, including generosity, freedom and trust. Finland
scores well on many of these factors, including equality, healthy life expectancy,
a lack of corruption and a great GDP.
As a nation, they face the same
global challenges as the UK. The Finnish response to these challenges is
somewhat different to ours in the UK. It is underpinned by a national commitment
to equality, education and transparency. Three things that have been in short
supply recently in the last few years in the UK! When I first started going to Finland,
I thought their general acceptance of what life gave them was rather strange.
However, over the years I visited, I came to realise that what it actually demonstrated
was a sense of contentment, again, something not seen everywhere in the UK. So
many people continuously look for something that they think might bring them
happiness. The older I get, the more I realise I have much to be grateful for
and that gives me a sense of contentment too.
One of the things I remain
grateful for is my reasonable health. Yes, I do get a little help in the shape
of a daily dose of statins, and regular cholesterol and blood pressure tests. And
now it seems, such ‘simple to do’ health checks are to be made available to
many more folk. The new NHS initiative, to be launched next Spring, will be in
the form of digital health checks accessed by one’s phone, tablet or computer. Leaving
aside for a moment the many people who won’t be digitally literate or won’t own
a smart phone, this initiative sounds like a great way forward.
The digital health check is
expected to ‘identify tens of thousands of cases of hypertension, and see hundreds
of stroke and heart attacks prevented’. Apart from having your blood pressure
taken at a pharmacy, people will be able to record the result of a self-administered
cholesterol test and chart their height and weight. Reading the story, it was
at this point I started to wonder about bathroom scales.
I wondered if everyone owned
bathroom scales. We do. It is one of the simple electric digital types, although
I find it difficult to turn on. And I think it also lies about my weight. Whilst
they might be marginally better than the older mechanical scales that have a
pointer that moves around to tell your weight, both can be wildly inaccurate.
Indeed, since 2003, it has been illegal for hospitals or GP practices to use
domestic bathroom scales in medical situations because they can be so
inaccurate.
I didn’t know home bathroom scales could be so inaccurate!
ReplyDeleteLydia