SPARK Europe Webinar Series ǀ 6 July 2022 | 4-5 pm (CET)
Prof. Dr. Sylvia Thun “Commercial Use of Health Related Data”
Are you performing clinical trials or are you planning to collect health related data from other sources?
Would you like to learn more about possibilities to use health related data, besides academic purposes?
In this SPARK Europe Webinar Series, Prof. Dr. Sylvia Thun, professor of Digital Medicine and interoperability and director of the core unit of eHealth and interoperability at the Charité/BIH, will present you the hallmarks of options in using health related data.
Being both, a physician and engineer by training, Prof. Dr. Sylvia Thun is working on implementation of communication standards for health care to enable an optimal use of acquired data to improve the development of diagnostics and therapies.
For her achievements and service in field of healthcare digitalization, Prof. Thun received the German cross of Merit in 2022.
After this talk, you will know about:
- What should you keep in mind when collecting health related data?
- How can you synchronize your data with established platforms?
- How can acquired data be used in a commercial way?
- How can digitalization and interoperability improve health care?
Online via MS Teams ǀ Please register here
Registration to the webinar is required in advance. Please register no later than July 5th, 2022. Please note that you will receive the MS Teams link and access code the evening before the lecture and that access to last minute registrations, cannot be guaranteed.
This webinar will be hosted by SPARK-BIH
SPARK Europe is the joint network of SPARK sites all over Europe including Israel: SPARK-BIH, SPARK Finland, SPARK FLI, SPARK Norway, SPARK Poland and SPARK Tel Aviv. European SPARK programs are members of SPARK Global network. The purpose of SPARK programs is to provide the education and mentorship necessary to advance research discoveries from the bench to the bedside, hence to increase the maturity of academic and clinical discoveries towards practical solutions that address unmet needs in the life science and health tech space. The program follows the same principles that have been the cornerstones of SPARK at Stanford since it was established by Professor Daria Mochly-Rosen and Kevin Grimes in 2006 for advancing new biomedical research discoveries into promising new treatments for patients.