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Vas Narasimhan Vas Narasimhan is an Influencer

Reimagining medicine as CEO of Novartis

We’re on the brink of a technology revolution of medicine.     We’re seeing what the next generation of medicines could make possible—new ways of treating and preventing disease, the scale of access they could enable, the more equitable health outcomes they could bring within reach.    As a drug developer, the next wave of breakthroughs could help patients in ways many of us have long dreamed about.     But what do these platforms look like? How do next-gen medicines work? I answer these questions and more in my latest article and as part of LinkedIn’s #BigIdeas2022.     Comment below to share what you find most promising as we work toward a healthier future together.

A technology revolution in medicine is here

A technology revolution in medicine is here

Vas Narasimhan on LinkedIn

Karun Gaur

Vice President at Dr. Reddy's Laboratories

4mo

Thought provoking and explaining siRNA in simplest way. Thanks a lot Vas. Appreciate the concern for access as LMICs are facing a bigger challenge of Non Commicable Disease as there are challenges of diagnosis and disease management due to poor infrastructure.

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George McNamara

Mumm lab member (through being HPS Core Manager)

2y

No love for TriNetX?

I for one am looking forward to the future without Cancer, heart disease, and Diabetes...

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I hope the innovation is not too far out there, how about putting the patient first. I worked extensively in Home Health and as a Hospice nurse all companies were fixated on numbers, not quality of care. I have stories that would curl your hair. I eventually took an early retirement when the company I worked HomeHealth for compromised my safety by putting me in a home were Covid was active and was not told of the circumstances. I alerted other clinicians and was basically driven out of my job and was forced to quit. I went to Board of Nursing and Government and all my efforts fell on deaf ears.

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HonYin Kok

CEO of IT Korperasi | FinTech | IT Strategy & Ops | Cloud & SaaS | Solution Architect | Infrastructure | Cybersecurity | DevSecOps & SRE | Data Engineering | Digital Transformation

3y

Public don't trust mRNA vaccines as there is not sufficient good track record to justify the safety nor their efficacy against the variants are proven without taking continuous and endless booster shots. The mRNA vaccine should graduate from emergency use authorization (EUA) by now if it is safe and the big pharma drug developers are standing behind their product instead of reaping huge financial benefits from their unproven product. Why can't Norvatis work on producing protein-based Covid-19 vaccines similar to Sinovac? I am sure US will have higher vaccination rate by now if this choice become widely available to the public.

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Kedar Desai

Assistant General Manager at Amneal pharmaceuticals

3y

Awesome The future of medicine industry.

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Tamara Brtan

Mommy of two beautiful kiddos fighting for Cure of Tuberous Sclerosis Complex! Case Management BSN, RN

3y

This is fabulous news, would this type of approach help those affected with tuberous sclerosis complex?

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Ola Hasanat

School Manager في Brimary school

3y

You only work to make money for wealth Not for medicine

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Jon Frampton

Sr Director, AI Security

3y

Couldn't agree more. The next 10+ years will see the most consequential change in the collective human condition and quality of life for all of us. It is an amazing time, and for those seeking to make a significant difference... I highly recommend considering pharmaceuticals, vaccines, and consumer healthcare, especially if you are interested in AI/ML, data science/analytics/engineering, and/or the supporting infrastructures, app/dev, etc. Come, make a difference, use your talents for the betterment of people's lives.

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Timothy Dougherty

Portfolio Manager and Biotech Podcast Host

3y

Medicine is undergoing a revolution. We are in the early stages of a technological transformation that will forever change the way we think about, access and practice medicine. The Internet of Things (IoT) has created an unprecedented opportunity to digitise health. Data captured from our bodies, homes, cities and communities can be used to develop new medicines, personalise healthcare delivery and improve the quality of life for people around the world. Behind these changes lies a technology revolution in medicine, which will transform how we understand diseases and find cures for them. Vas Narasimhan Thanks for posting.

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