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Stanford GSB News

 

Health Care and Biotech

2006

Biotech Startups Face New Challenges in the Marketplace
Venture capitalists ask tougher questions and increasingly biotechstartups are facing competition from mainstream drug companies, but thereare still plenty of opportunities, speakers told the annual Stanford GraduateSchool of Business Health Care Symposium. (April 2006)
Video File, Edward Penhoet, cofounder, Chiron Corporation, (57:50 minutes)
Video File, Stephen Hemsley, president and chief operating officer, UnitedHealthGroup, (1:09 hours)

2005

Reinventing Health Care, Drug Development, and the FDA
America's health care system is broken, drug development takes too long and costs too much, and the FDA needs major reform,speakers told the annual Health Care and Biotech Symposium. (March 2005)

Video File, Kennedy  Remarks, (29:36 minutes)
Video File, Kennedy Question & Answer Session, (7:56 minutes)
Video File, Rastetter Remarks, (37:09 minutes)
Video File, Rastetter Question & Answer Session, (7:59 minutes)

Shortages of Health Services, Abundance of Red Tape Hamper AIDS/HIV Battle
Understaffed and inadequate internal health-care systems andred tape are major roadblocks to fighting the spread of AIDS/HIVin developing countries, speakers told a conference on internationaldevelopment. (February 2005)

Keynote Address
Debrework Zewdie
Director, Global HIV/AIDS Program, World Bank

Panel on Delivery Innovations
Judith Justice, Moderator
Associate Professor, University of California, San Francisco

Ophelia Dahl
President and Executive Director, Partners in Health

Jack Higgins
Digital Vision Fellow, Global Telemedicine Project

Vikram Kumar
Director, Dimagi, Inc.

Tony Carroll
Consultant, Merck and Co.

Panel on Funding Innovations
Donovan Cook, Moderator
Western Region Director of Development, Save the Children, PaloAlto, Calif.

Timothy Goodman
Assistant Director for Global Policy, Pfizer Inc.

Srividya Prakash
Global Health Group, McKinsey & Co., San Francisco

David Green
CEO, Project Impact, Berkeley, Calif.

Panel on Medical Innovations
Vera Kulmyer, Moderator
Consulting Professor, Stanford Medical SchoolDepartment of Neurosurgery; Founder and Managing Partner, Equity for Health

Douglas Holtzman
Program officer for Infectious Diseases, Bill and Melinda GatesFoundation

George Rutherford
Interim Director, UCSF Institute for Global Health

Katherine Woo
Director of Scientific Affairs, One World Health

Nzeera Ketter
Director, Efficacy Trials, International AIDS Vaccine Initiative

Reinventing Health Care, Drug Development, and the FDA
America's health care system is broken, drug development takes too long and costs too much, and the FDA needs major reform,speakers told the annual Health Care and Biotech Symposium.
David Kennedy, (29:36 minutes)
Kennedy Q & A, (7:56 minutes)
William Rastetter, (37:09 minutes)
Rastetter Q & A, (7:59 minutes)

2004

Offshore Drug Development May Be Necessary to Control Cost
Doing at least preclinical drug development outside the United States may be necessary to bring down costs, speakers told the annual Health Care and Biotech Symposium. (March 2004)

2003

Conference Highlights Critical Role of Consumer Choice in Health-Related Businesses
Advances in health care are giving people longer and healthier lives, butthe 40 million Americans not covered by any type of insurance are makingit increasingly difficult to pay the bills and support the research,agreed speakers at the Stanford Graduate School of Business' fourthannual health care and biotech conference. (January 2003)

2002

Biotech Innovators and Investors Assess Challenges, Opportunities
The biotechnology industry faces major productivity challenges on the road to profits, but venture capitalists predict blue skies ahead—with just a few dark clouds. (February 2002)

2001

Genomics Industry Follows a Bumpy Road
The science of genomics is rapidly changing two business sectors—capital and pharmaceuticals—leaders in those industries said speakers at the Health Care Conference. (January 2001)


2000

The Internet May Transform Health Care

E-commerce and genomics will radically transform the stodgy pharmaceutical and health-care industries, according to industry leaders at the Stanford Business School's first Health Care and Technology conference.

Genome Research Is Changing Pharmaceuticals

The Human Genome Project will spur the development of several new types of businesses, according to the panelists at a biotechnology discussion at Stanford Business School's Health Care Technology Conference.