DIA: Driving Insights to Action
Science:Life Sciences
Digital tools that revolutionize information and communication technology are increasingly employed to transform the quality and quantity of clinical trial data. “The ability for us to reach patients in geographic locations and in demographic groups that the current system is missing is arguably the most important role of these technologies,” suggests Lauren Oliva, Global Regulatory Policy Lead for New Technologies, Biogen. “With the increased quantity of data, you do increase the quality to some extent in terms of your reach and the types of things that you could measure now that you wouldn't be able to measure in the past,” explains Josh Cosman, Principal Engineer, Digital & Quantitative Medicine, Biogen. Lauren will Chair the Drug Development Tools in a Digital Era session at DIA Europe 2020.
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Participatory Medicine Changing Information Exchange
New Ethics and Consent Guidelines Pillars for Safety in India
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FDA Payer Communication Guidance Steps Toward Sustainability
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Empowering Today’s Patients to Help Tomorrow’s
Imaging Data Plus AI “One of the Best Combinations”
Clinical Trial Diversity Begins (and Ends) with Patients First
Califf: Digitization Will Return Humanity to Medicine
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