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L’utilité de ce genre d’institutions est incontestable. Car le monde moderne est sans cesse confronté à des innovations, médicales ou autres, qui s’appliquent à l’homme ou à son environnement proche. Ce lieu est donc nécessaire pour préparer la matière intellectuelle qui sera ensuite transférée aux citoyens afin que ceux- ci puissent se prononcer quant à la légitimité de ces innovations.

 

Professeur Axel Kahn, le célèbre généticien français, lors de l’inauguration de la Fondation Brocher

 

Podcasts du Cycle Brocher

 

 

 

Le Cycle Brocher organise de nombreuses conférences au cours de l'année. La plupart des conférences sont disponibles en podcast

Retrouvez les podcasts du Cycle Brocher

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Kathryn Phillips Kathryn Phillips

Professor of Health Economics - University of California San Francisco
United States

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Kathryn A. Phillips, PhD, is Professor of Health Economics and Health Services Research at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). In 2008, she founded the UCSF Center for Translational and Policy Research on Precision Medicine (TRANSPERS), a global leader in developing objective evidence on effectively, efficiently, and ethically implementing precision medicine and other emerging technologies. She is also the Founding Editor-in-Chief of a fully open access journal: Health Affairs Scholar – Global and Emerging Health Policies.

Kathryn’s work focuses on generating and translating evidence for policy decision-making, examining how to effectively and equitably implement new technologies. She has published ~200 articles in major journals (e.g., JAMA, New England Journal of Medicine, Science, Health Affairs); has led National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants as Principal Investigator continuously for over 30 years; has served on the editorial boards for leading journals (Health Affairs, Value in Health; JAMA Internal Medicine); and has been a member of several National Academies of Medicine committees. She has advised/served with a range of national and international organizations, including the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, Genome Canada, and US government agencies (FDA, CDC, AHRQ, President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, and White House Office of Science and Technology Policy). She conducts global research with the Global Economics and Evaluation of Clinical Sequencing Working Group (Chair, 2017-2024). For several years, she has been among the top 2% of authors for career-long citations in her field (Ioannidis, 2024). Her work has been quoted by the Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, CNBC, Reuters, Newsweek, and other major news outlets. Kathryn has degrees from the University of Texas-Austin, Harvard, and the University of California-Berkeley.