woman with mask in hospital waiting room crowded with people, small photo of woman with long hair dancing on a field with a swirling dress

Are We Measuring Health — or Just Measuring the Economy?

What Are We Actually Measuring?

Much of our healthcare reporting tracks crisis indicators — hospital wait times, bed shortages, surgical backlogs, and costs. These are important. But they measure how we manage illness, not how we cultivate health.

What if we measured:

Community belonging

Participation in arts and cultural life

Time spent in nature

Intergenerational connection

Access to restorative movement and music

These factors influence stress regulation, immune resilience, and long-term disease risk. Yet they are rarely treated as core health metrics.

In Nova Scotia — especially on Cape Breton Island — our music, storytelling, landscape, and cultural gatherings are not just heritage. They are health assets.

If we want different outcomes, we may need to measure different things.