Ultimately, _everything_ you do, don't do, consume, use, avoid or covet should work towards that goal of maximising your #wellbeing or the well-being of others, right? What better unit than “QALY” for that?
“Currency” carries too much psychological and ideological baggage, and it keeps the spotlight in one very specific dimension (ie, money).
“Time” is better, but it ignores the vital distinction between time spent and time well spent (remember: it's “live long and prosper” not just “live long”).
I know it sounds far-fetched right now, but a much more refined definition of #QALY could be used to estimate the expected value of all products, habits and public policies — and to measure their impact in hindsight.
@tripu "What a tragedy it would be to think of these as fools who know (non-discriminating knowledge), yet are unaware (scientifically). To the remark that 'any fool can farm,' farmers should reply, 'a fool cannot be a true farmer.' There is no need for philosophy in the farming village. It is the urban intellectual who ponders human existence, who goes in search of truth and questions the purpose of life." -Masanobu Fukuoka, The Natural Way of Farming, Life in the Farming Villages of the Past
@tripu I cannot imagine a future in which doing this wouldn't end up as "fake rigor". There are too many degrees of freedom in investigating such things and controlling for other variables is never complete.
That being said, while I'm very skeptical about many applications of QALY, there are clearly areas in which they could be used more for specific interventions.
Imagine QALYs being used in this way in food packaging, election manifestos, gym memberships, employment contracts, streaming services, etc. As in:
> “Nutritional information (per 100 g of product): 145 kcal, 16 g of sugar, 3 g of protein, […]. Estimated benefit (500 g/week for a year, healthy adults): **0.0017 QALY**.”
> “This series has 4 seasons (32 chapters) and a total running time of 48 h. Longitudinal analyses of surveys conducted about similar shows predict a value of **2.8 μQ** per season.”
> “The study conducted by our think-tank estimates the likely impact of the policies proposed by all parties contesting the current election (in **QALY per capita**) in the following way: […]”
> “Our research suggests that the last tax reform resulted in a net loss of ca. **369 MQ (10⁶ QALY)** for the country.”