DIA: Driving Insights to Action
Science:Life Sciences
As Johnson & Johnson Chief Medical Officer, DIA 2019 Co-Chair Dr. Joanne Waldstreicher is responsible for the company’s collaborations in ethical science, technology, and R&D policies, including those related to clinical trial transparency and compassionate access. “When you ask people why they’re participating in a clinical trial, a big part of it is to benefit themselves, they might have a condition or a disease where they’re looking for a new treatment option,” she explains. “But a very large part of their motivation is to contribute to medical knowledge that will advance or help care for a future patient.”
Risk Inherent in Benefits of Drug/Device Products?
EU Business and Data Needs Converge Through Telematics
RIM Accelerating Efficiencies in Regulatory Pathways
Translating Clinical Trials into Clinical Benefit
More Tools & Data Sources: More Insights for RBM?
Landmark AMA to Rely on Regulatory Reliance
Healthy Population Key to Economic Success
Defining Rational Medicine and Research at DIA Japan 2019
How Do You Put Your Disease on the Agenda?
Participatory Medicine Changing Information Exchange
New Ethics and Consent Guidelines Pillars for Safety in India
Real World Data Expanding into Label Expansion
Educating Persons Critical in Personalized Medicine
FDA Payer Communication Guidance Steps Toward Sustainability
Genetic Engineering Transforming Research Ethics
Only Big Trust Propels Big Data into Big Discoveries
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
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
Short Wave
Unexplainable
Stuff To Blow Your Mind
Terrace | تراس