Logo

    health economics

    Explore "health economics" with insightful episodes like "Episode 174: The Road to a Healthy Heart – Part 2", "The Importance of RWE Strategy Planning", "#335. Do Marathons Increase Deaths in Host Cities? The Unpredictable Factors Shaping Your Wellbeing - Data, Economics, and Chance with Dr. Bapu Jena", "EP409: 3 Really Cool Innovative Primary Care Bright Spots and a Few Notes for Policymakers and Payers, With Larry Bauer, MSW, MEd" and "How Healthcare Shapes Elections | Health Economist Jane Sarasohn-Kahn" from podcasts like ""The EMJ Podcast: Insights For Healthcare Professionals", "Therapeutic Science and Strategy", "The BluePrint with Dr. Erik Korem", "Relentless Health Value™" and "The Heart of Healthcare with Halle Tecco"" and more!

    Episodes (16)

    Episode 174: The Road to a Healthy Heart – Part 2

    Episode 174: The Road to a Healthy Heart – Part 2

    Join Jonathan as he welcomes back Greg Marcus, Endowed Professor of Atrial Fibrillation, and Professor of Residence (Medicine) at the University of California, San Francisco, USA. They discuss how ethnicities need to be researched with regard to atrial fibrillation, including how adverse outcomes differ depending on an individual’s ethnicity. They also talk about digital health, and how AI devices encourage people to become more aware of their own health.

     

    Use the following timestamps to navigate the content in this episode:

    (00:00)-Introduction

    (00:37)-The economics of cardiac disease prevention and cardiac devices

    (05:00)-Genetic risk across ethnic groups

    (07:54)-Atrial fibrillation detected by smart watches

    (12:05)-AI in cardiology

    (12:49)-A new energy for common catheter ablation

    (15:14)-Personalised medicine

    (16:53)-Advice for young cardiologists

    (20:59)-Three wishes for the future of healthcare

    The Importance of RWE Strategy Planning

    The Importance of RWE Strategy Planning

    There are incredible synergies with joint HEOR and Real World Evidence (RWE) projects, but there are also unique challenges. In this podcast episode, The Importance of RWE Strategy Planning, Ann-Marie Chapman, Nikita Jeswani, Meena Venkatachalam, and Alex Thorel discuss the use cases and planning for RWE, identifying appropriate RWE, and RWE trends. 

    Listen to this podcast to learn:

    ·         Key considerations, steps, and recommendations in identifying appropriate data sources

    ·         Where RWD and RWE are leveraged most across the product lifecycle

    ·         The length of time it takes to initiate an RWE study

    ·         The common mistakes in RWE study planning

    ·         The major changes in the RWD space over the last 10 years and in the future

    #335. Do Marathons Increase Deaths in Host Cities? The Unpredictable Factors Shaping Your Wellbeing - Data, Economics, and Chance with Dr. Bapu Jena

    #335. Do Marathons Increase Deaths in Host Cities? The Unpredictable Factors Shaping Your Wellbeing - Data, Economics, and Chance with Dr. Bapu Jena

    What role does chance play in your health and even your mortality? Find out from economist and physician Dr. Anupam B. Jena, who explores these fascinating questions in his new book Random Acts of Medicine.

    Dr. Jena reveals how random events we'd never expect can profoundly shape our wellbeing. Discover insights like:

    • How marathons unexpectedly increase deaths for non-participants
    • Why minutes matter so much in heart attacks and other emergencies
    • 'Left-digit bias' and its surprising influence on high-stakes life-or-death decisions
    • The role of big data in healthcare and the need for big questions.
    • How to differentiate between signal and noise in data.

    This mind-opening conversation will give you a peek into Dr. Jena's creative process for conceiving questions and uncovering hidden insights about medicine. You'll learn how to foster your own curiosity and think in unexpected ways about health.

    Tune in now to expand your mind through the unpredictable occurrences that secretly affect us all. The chance events that seem random but are often predictable when viewed through the right lens.

    Purchase Random Acts of Medicine

    Follow Dr. Jena on Twitter on both his personal and podcast account

    Sign up for Erik’s weekly newsletter - Adaptation

    Join the AIM7 Beta Community

     


    Quotable moments:

    "There's another role that chance plays in our life that is equally random, but is much more predictable. And it also can teach us something sometimes." - Dr. Bapu Jena

    "We spend so much time thinking about all the data that we can collect without thinking to ourselves, what are the most interesting applications we can make of the data before we gather it?" - Dr. Bapu Jena

    "I think we have plenty of data. And we had plenty of data a few years ago. I think what we're lacking in a lot of respect isn't big data, big questions." - Dr. Bapu Jena

    "If you actually want the kind of transformation that allows you to do things with less effort, more ease, more enjoyment, like it's a real part of you. That's why willpower matters." - Dr. Bapu Jena


    ABOUT THE BLUEPRINT PODCAST:

    The BluePrint Podcast is for busy professionals and Household CEOs who care deeply about their families, career, and health. Host Dr. Erik Korem distills cutting edge-science, leadership, and life skills into simple tactics optimized for your busy lifestyle and goals.   Dr. Korem interviews scientists, coaches, elite athletes, entrepreneurs, entertainers, and exceptional people to discuss science and practical skills you can implement to become the most healthy, resilient, and impactful version of yourself.

    On a mission to equip people to pursue audacious goals, thrive in uncertainty, and live a healthy and fulfilled life, Dr. Erik Korem is a High-Performance pioneer. He introduced sports science and athlete-tracking technologies to collegiate and professional (NFL) football over a decade ago. He has worked with the National Football League, Power-5 NCAA programs, gold-medal Olympians, Nike, and the United States Department of Defense.

    Erik is an expert in sleep and stress resilience. He is the Founder and CEO of AIM7, a health and fitness app that unlocks the power of wearables by providing you with daily personalized recommendations to enhance your mind, body, and recovery.

    SUPPORT & CONNECT

    Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/erikkorem/

    Twitter - https://twitter.com/ErikKorem

    LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/erik-korem-phd-19991734/

    Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/erikkorem

    Website - https://www.erikkorem.com/

    Newsletter - https://erikkoremhpcoach.activehosted.com/f

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    EP409: 3 Really Cool Innovative Primary Care Bright Spots and a Few Notes for Policymakers and Payers, With Larry Bauer, MSW, MEd

    EP409: 3 Really Cool Innovative Primary Care Bright Spots and a Few Notes for Policymakers and Payers, With Larry Bauer, MSW, MEd

    In this healthcare podcast, we are talking about innovative primary care teams and, by way of Larry Bauer, my guest today, bringing you three inspiring case studies. Much can be inferred from these case studies, as much from how they are alike as how they are different. It is wildly important at the same time that it is wildly underappreciated how different local markets are. I love how Cody Coonradt put it on LinkedIn the other day. He wrote:

    “Healthcare is not a $4T market—it’s 500 some-odd interconnected markets ranging in size from $1-50B. [It is] not a singular problem … each market [is driven] by unique third party payer incentives with unique patient cohorts. …

    “Before you figure out the next great idea—seek to understand the underlying health economic, revenue cycle, service provider contracting, and cash conversion processes that undergird it all. [That] is how to truly disrupt healthcare.”

    Or, said another way, if you’re part of the community, if you are already caring for patients in that community because you’re a doctor or another clinician, you probably have the best shot at truly—and in meaningful ways—helping patients in that community.

    This whole statement is a really uncomfortable truth for many in private equity and anybody else who wants to find the easy button to fix healthcare with some big-ass, scalable, rapid-fire bulldozer approach. It’s also a very uncomfortable truth for any national payer looking for one model or one point solution to roll out in a broad stroke to every one of these 500 some-odd interconnected markets that Cody mentioned. One size does not fit all here, and leveling up patient outcomes and care is hard grueling work that requires local market knowledge, being rooted in the community with relationships to succeed. You gotta get a little closer to the ground. Policymakers, please take some notes here. And you, too, self-insured employers, payers. So many universal lessons are embedded in these three examples that Larry Bauer, my guest, shares today.

    But bottom line—and round of applause required—you go, all you doctors and nurses and other clinicians or mission-oriented teams who take it upon yourselves to find ways to address the problem of human suffering in your local area.

    Stay tuned for an upcoming show with Jodilyn Owen, where we dig into this whole dynamic hard. I’m talking about the dynamic where some barbarian at the gate (ie, some venture-funded start-up) has gotten money—in some cases, lots of money—while there are community-based organizations out there who are doing amazing work really helping patients in the community improving outcomes and cutting costs and struggling, scrambling for every penny they can manage to get their hands on. So, that’s in the future.

    Talking about today, though, we’re gonna cover the bright spots when you get a really creative and committed PCP (primary care) team who is part of their own community and who wants to do better by patients locally and got some money to attain that goal. Today, as I said earlier, I am talking with Larry Bauer, who has been working with innovative PCPs and other docs for decades.

    All three of these case studies that Larry describes on the show today concern frail elderly adults, and this is on purpose (this using of the same patient population) for a couple of reasons. One of them is just to highlight that the same population in different geographies is not the same population and, therefore, the solution set is going to be different if we’re gonna reach out and care for them.

    The second reason for selecting three solutions that all pertain to frail elders is that this group is notoriously expensive and care is notoriously poor. Everybody has a story about how their frail elderly family member or friend died a bad death or did not “finish well,” as Larry Bauer puts it. It’s a patient population at the mercy of this industry and unable, a lot of times, to advocate for themselves. So, solutions here solve, in a way, for the worst-case scenario and might be a great starting point for anybody contemplating how to help other patient populations, too.

    The three innovations we discuss today are:

    1. Dan Hoefer, MD, and Suzie Johnson in their Transition Program in San Diego helping those at the end of their lives to “finish well.” This is a capitated program.

    2. Ken Coburn, MD, who, along with his team, created Health Quality Partners in Pennsylvania. This is a nurse navigator program, and it is paid for by a CMS grant.

    3. Alan “Chip” Teel, MD, at Full Circle America with a program to wire up patient homes so that the clinical team could monitor what was going on in the home, intervene in case of emergencies, as well as organize community services. This program is paid for by the patient or the patient’s family, but, point of note, it is 10 times cheaper than a nursing home.

    I do ask Larry Bauer, by the way, how to best walk the line between right-sized care and not enough care (ie, the whole death panel counterargument to some of this stuff). I think Larry’s answer was elegant. You’re gonna need to listen to the show to hear it.

    My guest today is Larry Bauer, as I have mentioned four to six times already. He is a social worker by training who has been at this, as he says, for a very long time. He created a not-for-profit called Family Medicine Education Consortium (FMEC) over 30 years ago, and it became a platform for bringing together very talented and capable family physicians and some general internists. This gang has been really redefining and re-creating primary care … which is a great way to sum up the three programs that Larry Bauer will talk about today.

     

    You can learn more at the Family Medicine Education Consortium Web site or by emailing Larry at laurence.bauer@gmail.com.

    Larry wrote a “Bright Spot” report; check it out here.

     

    Laurence Mahoney Bauer, MSW, MEd, served as chief executive officer of the Family Medicine Education Consortium, Inc., from 1994 to October 2021. The FMEC is a not-for-profit corporation designed to promote collaboration among the academic family medicine and primary care communities in the northeast region of the United States.

    He has also served as director of network development for the Center for Innovation in Family and Community Health in Dayton, Ohio, from January 2006. He is an associate clinical professor in the Wright State University School of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, in Dayton.

    Previously, he served at The Ohio State University School of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, for 4 years as director of organization and faculty development. He served as director of faculty development and behavioral science in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the Pennsylvania State University School of Medicine in Hershey, Pennsylvania, for 13 years.

    Presently, he is an active consultant committed to the creation of a primary care–driven system in the United States. He lives in Hershey. He enjoys pickleball, basketball, and gardening.

     

    06:53 In a brief overview, what does end-of-life care in America look like?

    10:38 What are the three innovative systems and physicians Larry Bauer has worked with?

    14:27 What does it mean to be in a capitated system?

    19:14 What does the Health Quality Partners system look like?

    22:13 Andreas Mang from Blackstone; look out for his episode in September.

    22:50 What is a number one reason for hospital readmissions?

    23:26 The third example of innovative primary care.

    27:04 Why is comprehensive care at the community level so important and successful for end-of-life care?

    28:03 “The number one goal is not cost containment; that’s one of the outcomes.”

    28:26 What is the core issue for these three types of innovative care?

    31:02 What does good policy to encourage this type of innovation look like?

    33:22 EP326 with Rishi Wadhera, MD, MPP.

    34:14 Why is it important to trust physicians and be present and partnered with physicians?

     

    You can learn more at the Family Medicine Education Consortium Web site or by emailing Larry at laurence.bauer@gmail.com.

    Larry wrote a “Bright Spot” report; check it out here.

     

     

    Larry Bauer of @FMEC_ discusses #innovation in #primarycare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast

     

    Recent past interviews:

    Click a guest’s name for their latest RHV episode!

    Dr Vivek Garg (Summer Shorts 3), Dr Scott Conard (Summer Shorts 2), Brennan Bilberry (Summer Shorts 1), Stacey Richter (INBW38), Scott Haas, Chris Deacon, Dr Vivek Garg, Lauren Vela, Dale Folwell (Encore! EP249), Eric Gallagher

    How Healthcare Shapes Elections | Health Economist Jane Sarasohn-Kahn

    How Healthcare Shapes Elections  | Health Economist Jane Sarasohn-Kahn

    Does the US believe in public health? Do voters think about healthcare when voting? Are we really health citizens? If you're curious about the intricate connections between politics and healthcare in our country, this episode is a must-listen. Gain insights into what’s on voters’ minds, and discover the potential future of healthcare policies in the United States leading up to the 2024 election.


    Jane Sarasohn-Kahn is a health economist, communicator, and trend weaver. Through her advising, writing and speaking, she focuses across the health/care ecosystem on consumers, health, technology, and policy.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    Episode 129: Winter Highlights

    Episode 129: Winter Highlights

    In this special episode, Evgenia Koutsouki, Editor of the EMJ family of journals, reflects on the most interesting and noteworthy moments of past 3 months on the EMJ podcast. Covering topics from research into childhood leukaemia to a deep dive into consciousness, this podcast looks back on the most fascinating insights provided by our guests.

    Episode 125: Understanding the Economics of Human Health

    Episode 125: Understanding the Economics of Human Health

    This week, Jonathan is joined by Karin Butler, Project Director at York Health Economics Consortium (YHEC), UK. They discuss Butler’s career in health economics and the role of health economics consultancies and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).

    Leading with Value to the Patient

    Leading with Value to the Patient

    Medical device suppliers and group purchasing organizations are teaming to bring new healthcare innovations such as single-use endoscopes to hospitals and health systems.

    By creating specific single-use endoscope categories for their members, these healthcare improvement companies can help accelerate the transition from reusable devices to disposable ones. But capitalizing on an opportunity to expand capacity and avoid costly and unnecessary expenses associated with workflow management and possible patient cross-contamination comes down to more than simply making a purchase.

    Rather, both sides need to approach these deals as true partnerships, hinging on performance measurements and outcome-based metrics. That was one key takeaway from a conversation that was part of a virtual session sponsored by Ambu as part of Becker’s Hospital  Review’s 12th Annual Meeting.

    Here are the experts you’ll hear from in this episode:

    • Karen Conway, vice president, healthcare value, GHX
    • Brian Howard, director, contract services, Vizient
    • Karen Niven, director, performance groups, Premier
    • India D. Randerson, vice president, strategic sourcing and procurement to payment, Henry Ford Health
    • Steering the conversation is Wes Scruggs, Ambu’s vice president of corporate accounts

    Show notes:

    110: Making a Difference in Communities through Public Health

    110: Making a Difference in Communities through Public Health

    Imagine this: you’re living in a rural community, and the nearest health center is still a boat ride away. When you get to the health center, however, there are no medicines available. This is sadly a common conundrum in the Philippines. So how do we make health accessible, available, and acceptable for everyone? Dr. Fonsy Regala, Chief of the Program Implementation and Outreach Division of the Department of Health- Health Promotion Bureau, shares his experiences working both for communities at the grassroots level and working with communities at a national scale to make people-centered solutions.

    If you would like to learn more about the community health promotion efforts of the Department of Health, check out their playbooks through this link: http://bit.ly/HPB_2021Playbooks 

    Get a preview of this episode's JQW Book Club book recommendations through the links below:

    1. Mobilizing the Community for Better Health: What the Rest of America Can Learn from Northern Manhattan by Allan Formicola and Lourdes Hernandez-Cordero https://amzn.to/3QfDbFR 
    2. Engaging Your Community: A Toolkit for Partnership, Collaboration, and Action by John Snow, Inc. (JSI) https://bit.ly/3D0X7t7 

    You can visit the EpiMetrics, Inc. website at www.epimetrics.com.ph. You can also follow us on Facebook at Epimetrics Inc., and on Instagram through @epimetricsph. Contact us through our email: publichealthonduty@gmail.com.

    This podcast was produced by Abigail Tan of EpiMetrics Inc and Antonette Mendoza of Big Baby Studios. It was edited and hosted by Angeli Magdaraog and Martha dela Paz of EpiMetrics Inc. It contains original theme music by Big Baby Studios’ Peavey Nicolas, who also engineered the episode. A special thanks to our executive producer, Dr. John Q. Wong.

    109: Serbisyong Sulit at Dekalidad: How Health Technology Assessment Ensures Health Interventions and Commodities are Worth the Price

    109: Serbisyong Sulit at Dekalidad: How Health Technology Assessment Ensures Health Interventions and Commodities are Worth the Price

    Keeping in mind the fundamental principle in economics that resources are finite, how do governments decide which health services to invest in? Join us with Dana S. Bayani, health economist and PhD student in the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health of the National University of Singapore as we discuss the importance of health technology assessment in ensuring that health interventions and commodities are always worth their prices.

    Get a preview of this episode's JQW Book Club book recommendations through the links below:

    1. Evaluating Health Interventions: An Introduction to Evaluation of Health Treatments, Services, Policies, and Organizational Interventions by John Øvretveit https://amzn.to/3BaQmn1 
    2. Evaluating the Healthcare System: Effectiveness, Efficiency, and Equity by Lu Aday https://amzn.to/3wVLM9Q 

    Did this episode spark your interest in HTA? You may find the work of the HTA Division of the DOH at https://hta.doh.gov.ph/.

    You can visit the EpiMetrics, Inc. website at www.epimetrics.com.ph. You can also follow us on Facebook at Epimetrics Inc., and on Instagram through @epimetricsph. Contact us through our email: publichealthonduty@gmail.com.

    This podcast was produced by Abigail Tan of EpiMetrics Inc and Antonette Mendoza of Big Baby Studios. It was edited and hosted by Angeli Magdaraog and Martha dela Paz (@_callmemartha) of EpiMetrics Inc. It contains original theme music by Big Baby Studios’ Peavey Nicolas, who also engineered the episode. A special thanks to our executive producer, Dr. John Q. Wong.

    Calculating the Total Cost of Care

    Calculating the Total Cost of Care

    Transitioning from reusable to single-use endoscopes has obvious infection control benefits and even provides workflow and efficiency advantages — but the financial implications are usually one of the biggest hurdles to implementation.

    That’s why it’s important to explore all the variables that go into achieving cost savings with single-use devices and assessing that shift within the context of other healthcare paradigm shifts. In this conversation, four experts do exactly that by exploring the elements that go into calculating the total cost of care and better understanding what they call “the math problem” at the root of this analysis.

    This conversation was part of a virtual session sponsored by Ambu as part of Becker’s Hospital
    Review’s 12th Annual Meeting. Here are the experts you’ll hear from in this episode:

    Steering the conversation is Wes Scruggs, Ambu’s vice president of corporate accounts.

    Show notes:

    107: Measuring the Cost of One’s Health: The Importance of Health Economics and Health Financing

    107: Measuring the Cost of One’s Health: The Importance of Health Economics and Health Financing

    Can you really put a price on health? That’s where cost-effectiveness, cost-benefit, and other types of similar analysis comes in. Putting a price tag is needed to know what health initiatives should be prioritized and even how it affects the economy too. Join us with Dr. Valerie Gilbert Ulep, Senior Research Fellow, Philippine Institute for Development Studies, as we discuss how this type of research work is done and the impact it has on our different health programs.

    Get a preview of this episode's JQW Book Club book recommendations through the links below:

    1. Paradise Falls: The True Story of an Environmental Catastrophe by Keith O'Brien https://amzn.to/3cz4s8a
    2. The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic - and How it Changed Science, Cities and the Modern World by Steven Johnson https://amzn.to/3Tu3r1T

    You can visit the EpiMetrics, Inc. website at www.epimetrics.com.ph. You can also follow us on Facebook at Epimetrics Inc., and on Instagram through @epimetricsph. Contact us through our email: publichealthonduty@gmail.com.

    This podcast was produced by Abigail Tan of EpiMetrics Inc and Antonette Mendoza of Big Baby Studios. It was edited and hosted by Angeli Magdaraog and Martha dela Paz of EpiMetrics Inc. It contains original theme music by Big Baby Studios’ Peavey Nicolas, who also engineered the episode. A special thanks to our executive producer, Dr. John Q. Wong.

    Health Economic Modelling for MedTech Innovation - What, Why and How

    Health Economic Modelling for MedTech Innovation - What, Why and How

    Are you looking to launch a new medical technology, medical or diagnostic device in the UK, Europe or North America? Would you like to know how health economic modelling could support your market access journey?

    In this episode, converted from a recent live webinar, Calum Jones (Consultant Health Economist) and Nick Swart (Senior Health Economist) discuss what, why and how health economic models can support MedTech innovations to demonstrate value, achieve market access and reach more patients.

    Health economic modelling is becoming a key component of the MedTech market access journey. There is increasing need in many countries to demonstrate economic evidence for new technologies, with many health technology assessment (HTA) bodies now requiring economic models before offering guidance for reimbursement, such as NICE’s Medical Technology Evaluation Programme (MTEP).  MedTech firms are also recognising that a cost effectiveness model can also offer robust evidence of interventional value to support discussions with payers and other healthcare stakeholders.

    In this episode, Calum and Nick share their complementary perspectives and experiences of helping MedTech companies achieve market access.

    Please email info@mtechaccess.co.uk for a copy of Calum and Nick's slides or to find out more about how Mtech Access can support your market access journey.

    Learn more about our Health Economics services here: https://mtechaccess.co.uk/health-economics/

    Learn more about our work with Medtech companies here: https://mtechaccess.co.uk/medtech-market-access/ 

    Subscribe to our newsletter to hear more news, insights and events from Mtech Access.

    Finance & Commissioning with Patrick McGinley (Head of Costings and SLR) and Patricia Whelan-Moss (Head of Organisational Development for a CCG)

    Finance & Commissioning with Patrick McGinley (Head of Costings and SLR) and Patricia Whelan-Moss (Head of Organisational Development for a CCG)

    We explore the worlds of finance and commissioning in the NHS with insights from Patrick McGinley (Head of Costings and SLR, Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust) and Patricia Whelan-Moss (Head of Organisational Development – Brent CCG). 

    In this COVID-19 series, Tom Clarke (Director -  NHS Insights & Interaction, Mtech Access) asks experts holding operational, strategic and clinical roles across the NHS to share their experiences and insights into how the NHS has responded to COVID-19 and the wider challenges facing the health service.

    In this episode, Tom asks Patricia about the changes she has seen in the world of her CCG. He then speaks to Patrick about the changes in the NHS' finances as a result of the COVID pandemic. Tom asks Patrick what changes he expects to last and what these could mean for care delivery in the long term. He then comes back to Patricia to discuss how COVID might change the commissioning landscape. 

    This episode was originally broadcast on 24th April 2020 as a webinar. This podcast series has been converted from our webinar series 'How is COVID-19 impacting the NHS?'.

    Learn more about our NHS insights services at: https://mtechaccess.co.uk/uk-nhs-insights/ 

    Subscribe to our newsletter to hear more news, insights and events from Mtech Access.

    Service-delivery innovations: Perspectives on medical innovation in the UK

    Service-delivery innovations: Perspectives on medical innovation in the UK
    Innovations in service-delivery can improve efficiency, but they may be resisted before they are accepted. What can be done to manage this? The Medical Innovation lecture series has been conceptualized to bring together students, researchers, academics, practitioners and managers to debate the cross-cutting issue of innovation in the healthcare sector. The lectures explore the challenges of innovation within complex healthcare organisations and provided nuts-and-bolts advice for healthcare professionals and researchers to build businesses around their innovative ideas.
    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io