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Friday, 26 August 2011

World Meet Of The Pharma & Biotech Industry In India


Name : World Meet Of The Pharma & Biotech Industry In India

Date: Feb 23-26,2011
Venue: Bombay exhibition centre,NSE complex,Goregaon,Mumbai,India


PHARMA WORLD EXPO 2011 will be 25th exhibitions, and is expected to witness record participation.
The event, supported by CHEMTECH Foundation, will display state-of-the-art technologies, equipment, accessories and services from national and international players in each sector. The concurrent International Conferences will deleberate on issues of topical interest to practising professionals.

Catalysing Industrial Growth


The evolution and the growth of Indian Pharmaceutical and Biotech industries have been both reflected and catalyzed by CHEMTECH.

Industry Poised for High Growth


The Rs 25,000 crore (USD 5 billion) Pharma Industry has an average growth rate of 9% over the last 5 years, with exports of USD 1.75 billion. The industry is a net exporter having 8% market share (in volume terms) of the USD 340 billion global market. It is rapidly restructuring to the post-2005 product patent regime.
With liberalized economy, the Pharma multinationals are expanding operations in India and Indian companies are increasingly setting up operations and entering into joint ventures in other countries.
India has some 800 companies in the biotech sector, but over 25 companies operating in the third generation modern biotechnology. With governments are backing the industry, a sizeable number of biotech parks are coming up. India, therefore, will continue to have an exponential growth in this sector as investments in research.

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

2nd Annual Medical Management in Medicare Advantage: Payer/Provider Collaborative Care Summit

Pharmaceutical Exhibition Name: 2nd Annual Medical Management in Medicare Advantage: Payer/Provider Collaborative Care Summit 
Date: August 25-26, 2011
Venue: Hyatt Regency Mission Bay Spa and Marina, San Diego, CA






Summit Details: 


More than 200 attendees at our establish event, our Collaborative Care Summit has established itself as one of the prestigious  Medical Management conferences. Our 2011 program will keep going to allow the "next generation" medical management tactics that Health Plans, Hospitals and Physician Group's require in the current economic climate.


As the chronically ill catch up with more of the Medicare Advantage population, hospital readmissions have become a significant financial challenge. Plans must have a medical management strategy i.e. grounded in:

  • Evidence-based clinical practices
  • Predictive outcomes modeling
  • Member engagement
  • Multi-disciplinary professional collaboration 

Our event will discuss:

  • Accountable Care Organizations
  • Medical Homes 
  • Transitional Care 
  • And more!
For More Info Please Click On this Link or Click Here to get Info as mail

Link:


Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Pharma Industry Survey: Still not budgeting precisely - Pharma Survey - 57% still relying on Excel spreadsheets


The pharmaceutical industry is spending $68 billion per annum on research and development, but that isn’t stopping it from continuing to cling to Excel spreadsheets as the preferred planning tool for trials.
That’s according to a new survey from ClearTrial, a company that makes budgeting software for the life sciences industry. Of the survey’s 187 responses from pharma companies large and small, 57% reported using Microsoft Excel as the predominant method for clinical study forecasting and budgeting. Not surprisingly, then, only 21% of respondents said they were highly confident in their budget forecasts.
“The tools in the industry are pretty inadequate for the type of planning that is occurring; these trials are millions or tens of millions of dollars,” said Andy Grygiel, marketing manager for ClearTrial.
Half of the respondents reported an 11% difference between what they originally thought a trial would cost and what it actually ended up costing the company. And 20% said their cost variance was 16% or more.
When ClearTrial launched in 2004, said Grygiel, there was little interest among pharma companies in taking innovative measures to budget for trials. The money was flowing and no one was too worried about accurate budgeting, he said. But flash forward seven years to a post-recession world, and Grygiel says he thought he’d see something different. Unfortunately, he hasn’t. Pharma and device companies still hold fast to tools that clearly aren’t hitting the mark—for budgeting and forecasting or anything else.
Said Grygiel, beyond Excel spreadsheets, many in the industry are also fond of spawning their own software in-house to handle operations such as budgeting. Many others purchase an off-the-shelf program and try to tailor it to conform to the vagaries of clinical trials. Others look to benchmarking databases to help them figure out what a trial will cost, doing what Grygiel calls “what-if analysis.” None of these are working well.
Those who watch the industry say this is no shocker. “I’m not surprised; the clinical research drug industry has not been a leader in adopting new technology,” said Michael Martorelli, director at investment banking firm Fairmount Partners, consultant to the CRO industry, a long-time watcher of the space and an adjunct professor of finance at Drexel University.
Initially, he said, the pharmaceutical industry was so flush, there was no need to tinker with technology that might make it more efficient. Since all that has begun to change, though, adoption of technology has been slow due to a few confounding factors. Unlike other industries that have seen much earlier adoption of technology, drug developers are heavily regulated, and have to get much of what they’re doing approved by the FDA before it happens. This has made many drug companies less likely to move toward the full-scale operational change that would come with broad, sweeping new software systems, said Martorelli. In addition, he added, the drug development process involves so many players, each with their own software and/or operational processes that don’t necessarily communicate with each other—that it can be tempting for sponsors to just take the easy route, using Excel spreadsheets or their own home-grown systems.
“Another factor,” said Martorelli, “is the long-term nature of the industry’s projects. A trial might take 15 years from start to finish, and adopting new technology in the middle of it can present a daunting mess.” Many sponsors are using new technology for their new trials, but staying old-school (think Excel) for their older ones, thus creating a mishmash of operational styles even within one company, he said.
Another spreadsheet-driven gap that the survey unearthed lie in planning efficiency. Eighty three percent of respondents said that they required at least one to two weeks to create a ballpark budget for a clinical study, while half said they needed three weeks or more. And 62% of respondents reported requiring at least three weeks to roll up individual study budgets into a budget portfolio. This, said Grygiel, is largely a result of not having necessary documents and tools for research at one’s fingertips, but rather spread about in paper files.
The industry’s insistence on clinging to old ways when it comes to budgeting and forecasting puts it 10 to 15 years behind similar industries, said Grygiel. The pharma industry, in contrast, has been very conservative about change, especially when it comes to adopting new tools whose return on investment can take awhile to see, said Grygiel.
The tide may be turning, though, if very gradually. Grygiel said he’s seeing a slowly growing focus on better budget forecasting and thus an uptick in ClearTrial’s business.
“At one time there wasn’t the tight scrutiny on budgets that there is now, but now companies are looking at ways to become more efficient,” he said. “They’re looking closely at budgets, and the tolerance of variance in budgets has really come down.”
The survey, titled “Industry Survey: Clinical Study Budgeting Practices and Metrics,” garnered responses from managers and 187 executives in clinical operations, outsourcing, finance and project management from 75 pharma and medical device companies in the U.S., Europe and Japan. Grygiel said ClearTrial plans to do the survey every year to carefully track improvement—or the lack thereof.

Source: Center Watch


Monday, 1 August 2011

PHARMAceutical Expo 2011- EXHIBITION ON PHARMA INDUSTRY

Pharma Exhibition Name: Pharmaceutical Expo 2011
Date: 16 Dec 2011 - 18 Dec 2011
Venue: Banglore International Exhibition Center, Banglore, India.

PHARMaceutical EXPO 2011 brings home the bacon an opportunity to the taking part companies to exhibit their products and services to the business visitors of across the world. The event will be attended by to a greater extent  6000 delegates and top management of the industry.




Organizers of Pharmaceutical Expo 2011: 

Indian Pharmaceutical Congress (IPC)
FICCI Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industry ( FICCI )

Contact for enquiries:

Mr. Kamal Bhardwaj, 
Senior Assistant Director
Mob: 9899392930
Email: kamal@ficci.com

Mr.Varun Shekhar Mittal
Research Associate
Mob: +91 7428118390
Email: varun.mittal@ficci.com   

Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry
Federation House
Tansen Marg
New Delhi – 110001
Tel: 011 23357353, 23738760-70


Link For Exhibitor Registration: http://pharmaexpo.in/visitor-registration.php
Link For Visitor Registration: http://pharmaexpo.in/visitor-registration.php

 Source: PharmaExpo