I apologize for cross-posts ed/
September 30, 2005
New York City
www.release1-0.com/events/
I'm writing to invite you to my Personal Health Information (PHI) workshop
on September 30 in New York City. If you care about the business of
collection, management and use of personal health information, whether you
are an entrepreneur, investor, IT vendor, policymaker or a health-care
provider, you will want to participate.
To make effective use of the capital that investors, government and the
public (individuals, employers and insurers) will be pouring into this
sector over the next decade, the market first needs to see itself more
clearly: Investors need to see models of success, and start-ups need to
understand what competitors and potential partners are doing. At the PHI
workshop, you will meet other early entrants, see examples of what is
already happening in the field, and then discuss what could and should
happen. It's a unique chance to get comprehensive exposure to a nascent,
unformed market ripe with opportunities.
-
Esther's insights in Release 1.0 were the single most important influence
on me as I planned and executed the integration of Pfizer and Pharmacia's
technical infrastructure.
- Jonathan White, Pfizer
Release 1.0 subscriber since 2000
-
Each type of player in the PHI market will have a different role, but
overall the best strategy - and the best outcome - is to improve personal
health information liquidity, the ability of that information to move around
relatively friction-free. That is, it's not enough just to collect or to
store personal health information; it must be shared (under privacy
controls) and used in new applications by both patients and health-care
providers. Those kinds of tangible benefits, not the mere presence of a
record, will drive the market for personal health information forward.
That's the goal - and the ways to achieve it - that we'll be discussing on
Friday, September 30.
We'll also talk about what could happen when many of those records can be
aggregated (again with proper privacy protection) for use in public health,
epidemiology and evidence-based medicine of all kinds. What kinds of
better-targeted treatment will be possible? How real will the promise of
personal medicine be in five or ten years? And finally, what are the
potential side-effects - discrimination in employment, denial of coverage,
the very real issues around privacy and individuals' desire (or not) to know
the truth about their own conditions - and how can we guard against them?
-
Over the years, Esther has consistently shown the uncanny ability to
identify important IT trends well before others doand then bring
together those new ideas, the right people and the best technologies, and
synthesize it all into concrete business opportunities.
- Jim Breyer, Accel Partners
Release 1.0 subscriber since 1993
-
At Release 1.0, we have a 28-year history of putting IT innovations in
context, from standards to specifics, from infrastructure to applications,
from economics to policy, from technology to business. We also know how to
bring investors, entrepreneurs, policymakers and customers together to move
markets forward. Come join us in this exciting opportunity on September 30!
To register, visit www.release1-0.com/events/
Speakers will include:
Larry Augustin, CEO, Medsphere Systems/Vista
Giovanni Colella, President CEO, RelayHealth
George Church, Professor of Genetics, and Director, Lipper Center for
Computational Genetics, Harvard Medical School
Carol Diamond, Managing Director, Health Program, Markle Foundation
Ed Fotsch, CEO, Medem
Carol McCall, VP, Center for Health Metrics, Humana
Ryan Phelan, Founder CEO, DNADirect
Jeffrey Rideout, VP, Internet Business Solutions Group, Healthcare Practice,
Cisco Systems
Paul Sheils, CEO, Aetna Health Information Solutions
Charles Silver, President CEO, RealAge
Jonathan White, Senior VP, Planning, HHIT and Business Development, Pfizer
Yours,
Esther Dyson
Editor, Release 1.0
edyson at release1-0.com
PS - Register today for the Personal Health Information workshop on
September 30. Feel free to pass this invitation along to a colleague as
well.
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