Zobrazeno 1 - 9
of 9
pro vyhledávání: '"Rebecca Ashkenazy"'
Autor:
Rebecca Ashkenazy
Publikováno v:
Drug Discovery Today. 25:475-479
Within the biopharmaceutical environment there are increased expectations for medical affairs to serve as a patient understanding facilitator, engagement champion and empowerment enabler. The collaborative development of a medical affairs patient-cen
Autor:
Rebecca Ashkenazy
Publikováno v:
Drug Discovery Today. 24:665-667
Autor:
Roslyn F. Schneider, Rebecca Ashkenazy
Publikováno v:
Therapeutic innovationregulatory science. 50(5)
In order to better understand and advance the field of patient-focused drug development, a multifunctional patient affairs team developed and piloted a Patient Centricity Team Tool (PCTT) within a large pharmaceutical organization. The tool is a comp
Publikováno v:
Clinical Medicine Insights. Women's Health
Clinical Medicine Insights: Women's Health, Vol 11 (2018)
Clinical Medicine Insights: Women's Health, Vol 11 (2018)
There are powerful demographic, political, and environmental trends shaping women’s health. Increases in life expectancy, literacy, and empowerment are fueling expansions in education and advocacy. Research and development focuses on women’s heal
Autor:
Rebecca Ashkenazy
Publikováno v:
Drug discovery today. 23(4)
Autor:
Rebecca Ashkenazy
Publikováno v:
Drug Discovery Today. 21:201-203
Autor:
Rebecca Ashkenazy
Publikováno v:
Drug discovery today. 21(7)
Personalized and precision medicine concepts have transformed the healthcare delivery environment from research and development to commercialization. Precision medical communication (PMC) represents a strategy to maximize personalized healthcare elem
Publikováno v:
Drug Discovery Today. 14:1037-1044
Healthcare costs in all industrial nations have increased and payors are starting to look at new ways to contain costs and at new funding models. The business model of pharmaceutical companies is also undergoing rapid changes – potentially disrupti
Publikováno v:
Vision research. 37(20)
Current theories of reading eye movements claim that reading saccades are programmed primarily on the basis of information about the length of the upcoming word, determined by low-level visual processes that detect spaces to the right of fixation. Ma