Exploring the Nexus of Business and Medicine
WHAT:
A new yearly intercampus symposium exploring how business and medicine can collaborate to solve today's health care challenges. Panel members will discuss and answer questions regarding the state of collaboration between industry, academia and government in addressing global public health needs, and how evolving reimbursement practices are changing what it means to practice medicine.
DATE & TIME:
Thursday, April 30, 2009
3:00 - 6:45 p.m.
PLACE:
Weill Cornell Medical College
Uris Auditorium
1300 York Avenue at 69th Street
Simulcast live to Sage Hall B09
Johnson School, Cornell University
SCHEDULE:
Panel 1 (3:00 - 4:45 p.m.)
Exploring the State of Collaboration Between Industry, Academia and Government to Address Global Public Health Needs
- Dr. Christopher Earl, President & CEO, BIO Ventures for Global Health
- Dr. Bennett Shapiro, Chairman, Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, North America; and Senior Partner, PureTech Ventures
- Dr. Suzanne Hill, Secretary, Essential Medicines and Pharmaceutical Polices, World Health Organization
- Dr. Marcus Reidenberg (Moderator), Chief of Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Weill Cornell Medical College
Panel 2 (5:00 - 6:45 p.m.)
Evolving Reimbursement Practices and What It Means to Be a Doctor
- Dr. Herbert Pardes, President and CEO, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
- Dr. Michael Wolk, Clinical Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College
- Dr. Aran Ron, Former President and Chief Operating Officer, Group Health Inc.
- Dr. Derek Dubois, Associate Principal, McKinsey & Company
- Dr. Lawrence Casalino (Moderator), Chief, Division of Outcomes and Effectiveness Research, Weill Cornell Medical College
The Cornell Business & Medicine Symposium, part of the "Sick in America" series, was jointly organized and developed by members of the Healthcare & Biotech Club of the Johnson School of Management and the Business in Medicine Society of Weill Cornell, and envisioned as a venue to discuss the roles business should play in the practice of medicine. For more information, visit www.cctec.cornell.edu/bms.
"Sick in America 2009," hosted by Cornell University and created by 12 undergraduate groups representing more than 600 undergraduates, is a new series presenting expert discussion on health care in the United States. Through a weeklong array of lectures, panel discussions, documentary presentations and art installations, the "Sick in America" series is presenting diverse and innovative views on health care reform from experts at all levels of health management. For more information, visit www.sickinamerica.com.
Lezlie Greenberg
leg2003@med.cornell.edu