Mar 15, 2018
Julie is an executive
pharmaceutical leader with over 20 years of experience across all
phases of development both on the commercial and research sides of
the organization. She leverages her Masters in Business
Administration and Doctorate of Pharmacy to develop and deliver
strategic patient-centric value propositions to optimize patient
access and improve outcomes in patients with difficult to treat
diseases leading to longer, healthier, and more productive lives.
Her years of experience in global and US payer markets provides
Julie with intimate knowledge of the current and evolving payer and
market access landscape in the United States and around the globe.
She has led the development and execution of several outcomes-based
contracts with 3 of the largest national payer organizations in the
US.
Julie is well published, having authored more than 30 publications
in peer-reviewed journals and more than 60 peer-reviewed abstracts
presented as posters at major scientific congresses.
00:00 Julie’s earlier episode - EP144 - the “prequel” to this
episode.
01:45 Innovative contracting and outcomes based agreements.
02:00 Real World Data vs Real World Evidence.
03:15 The reason behind the Real World Data lag in health care.
03:35 Value-based pricing.
05:00 Who has the best information on a specific product according
to who owns patient population Real World Data.
05:45 What Real World Evidence is, and how it differs from Real
World Data.
06:15 How Real World Evidence stems from Real World Data.
07:20 Who hires these organizations and how they fit into the value
chain.
09:10 Leveraging this data into workflows.
10:30 How pharma companies will utilize Real World Data.
13:35 Are pharma manufacturers being affected by Real World
Evidence or Real World Data?
16:00 Is needing Real World Evidence becoming more prominent to US
health care?
18:25 The different types of data and how that affects what sorts
of conclusions various payers can come to.
21:30 The current gap for physicians at the point of care.
28:25 “Collaboration is a core skill.”
29:15 “You need to first ask around - you don’t know what you don’t
know.”
30:25 “One of the most important things early on is just to
listen.”
32:30 Genesis Research and their work.