Changing the Game in Life Sciences, presented by SAPArchives Available on VoiceAmerica Business Channel Author: Bonnie D. Graham
By 2025, the global life sciences market will have changed dramatically from the industry we know today. Patients will be more accountable for their care and have greater access to their personal health information. Patients and payers will demand personalized treatments with superior outcomes, but cost-effectively. Technology will allow patients to use smart devices to monitor their health in real time while collaborating with their physicians from home. Patient outcomes will be continually monitored to identify patient populations that may have an identical genetic predisposition to a treatment, while providing early detection of any adverse events. Patients, physicians, providers, and producers will collaborate tightly within a treatment protocol to ensure optimal outcomes at reduced costs. Join host Bonnie D. Graham for a Coffee Break with Game-Changers special series on how the digital economy is transforming the Life Sciences industry on Changing the Game in Life Sciences. Language: en-us Genres: Business News, News, Science, Social Sciences Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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Encore: Reimagining Business Models in Life Sciences
Thursday, 16 November, 2017
The buzz: “All verticals are experiencing an explosion of data–but in healthcare and especially the life sciences field, the scale of this explosion is staggering” (Rahul Joshi). While increasing regulations, decreasing margins, industry consolidation, and process digitalization disrupt Life Sciences business models, they don’t show a clear road to the future. What to do? Digitalize business models and the supply chain, and speed innovation to improve health outcomes and reduce care costs. The experts speak. Joe Miles, SAP: “The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking” (Einstein). Shawn Brodersen, HCL: “If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got” (Einstein). Rasmus Nelund, NNIT: ““The critical concerns of leadership are not technical questions of management or power, they are fundamental issues of life” (Prof. James March). Join us for Reimagining Business Models in Life Sciences.