2009-10-12

Where is the consumer in healthcare?

Prof. Regina Herzlinger, with the Harvard Business School, will be teaching a free intensive seminar course, Innovations in Consumer-Driven Health Care, in January 2010. This is a one week class, beginning on 1/11/10 and ending on 1/15/10.

She welcomes students from the various Harvard and MIT graduate schools as well as both undergraduate universities to submit their resumes to her for consideration if they wish to enroll . These can be to jlopez@hbs.edu. The class itself will be held on the Harvard Business School campus and will likely run from 9.00am until 3.30pm with a lunch period from 11.30am-1.00pm. Students chosen to take part in this class will be notified in November.

Innovations in Consumer-Driven Health Care

Monday, January 11-Friday, January 15; 9-11:30am and 1-3:30pm
Aldrich 211

Career Focus

Health care industry

Educational Objectives

This seminar will focus on the creation of innovations in health care that
better meet consumer needs.

Content and Organization

In the first two sessions on day one, students will examine three different
national models for achieving universal coverage:

*   Consumer-driven health care in Switzerland, in which consumers use their
own funds to purchase insurance
*   Single payer health care in the UK, in which the government controls the
health care system
*   Managed competition system in the Netherlands, in which the government
creates a national health care market

On day two, the second two sessions will delineate the entrepreneurial
opportunities and obstacles created by a consumer-driven health care system.

On days three, four, and five, students will discuss case studies of
entrepreneurial, consumer-driven ventures in the following fields:

*   Health insurance - innovative efforts that support health promotion and
reward efficiency (two cases)
*   Health services - focused, integrated care for chronic diseases; specialty
hospitals; retail health care outlets; medical travel (four cases)
*   Personalized diagnostics tests for mutated genes; companies that offer
genetic maps (two cases)
*   Personalized medical devices - Proteous; Chronicle (two cases)
*   Personalized drugs (one case)
*   Personalized information (one case)

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