TOP STORIES
Maybe the last words – at least for awhile – on Martin Shkreli and Turing Pharmaceuticals?
With the Rise of AI, What IP Disputes in Healthcare Are Likely to Emerge?
Munck Wilson Mandala Partner Greg Howison shared his perspective on some of the legal ramifications around AI, IP, connected devices and the data they generate, in response to emailed questions.
- Turing will drop the price of Daraprim in the coming weeks. To what? He would not say. – CNBC
- Shkreli is “a sponge for information” but “there’s nobody there in Martin’s life to tell him what the right thing is.” – The New York Times
- Shkreli may be the whipping boy for critics of soaring drug prices, but don’t blame pharmaceutical companies, author Rafi Mohammed argued. Some price regulation may be in order, he said. — Harvard Business Review
- BMO Capital remains bullish on Valeant Pharmaceuticals, despite that company being called out by Hillary Clinton for “price gouging.” — Bidness Etc
LIFE SCIENCE
The Mylan-Perrigo bids are now deep in the courts. Mylan has countersued to correct “serious misstatements.”- Reuters
Nestle has struck a collaboration deal with AC Immune to develop an Alzheimer’s test, underscoring “the commitment by the world’s largest packaged food company to the faster-growing, more profitable medical field as sales of processed foods slow in many markets.” – Reuters
Bridge Bank has launched a life science group to provide debt to pharma, medical device and biotech. – Marketwired
A research team at McGill University in Montreal is making strides in understanding the progression of Parkinson’s disease. — ScienceDaily
PAYERS-PROVIDERS
Save this quote from the Anthem-Aetna hearings: “Our savings will be passed along in the pricing of our product.” –FierceHealthPayer
On the day that the Institute of Medicine released a landmark report on diagnostic error, CNN provides this clickbait, er, slideshow of “25 shocking medical mistakes.” — CNN
The former owner of a long-shuttered Chicago hospital pleaded guilty to perjury, following years of denying Medicare fraud, multimillion-dollar civil judgments and an extradition battle. — Chicago Tribune
The former King/Drew Medical Center in Los Angeles, a.k.a. “Killer King,” is putting the emphasis on care teams and patient safety under new management and a new name. — Los Angeles Times
Researchers at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center have discovered a new type of cell that could provide clues to food allergies. — PR Newswire
TECH
A wearable for athletes (aren’t they all?) named Whoop has raised $12 million. – MobiHealthNews
Here’s a list of healthcare CIO budget priorities – EMR & HIPAA
Medical students named fragmented care the top safety risk for patients, according to an Epocrates survey, suggesting that interoperability of health data should be a priority. — athenahealth
Clearwater Clinical has formed a mobile endoscopy and mobile medical photography division called Modica. — Clearwater Clinical
POLITICS
Health and Human Service is already lower expectation for the next round of health-law signups, saying it could be “the toughest yet.” – Wall Street Journal
A whistleblower with a group called “VA Truth Tellers” told a congressional panel that the Department of Veterans Affairs’ Office of Inspector General is “a joke.” — Associated Press via U.S. News & World Report
New York allowed people to get health insurance benefits they weren’t supposed to. – Wall Street Journal
CGI Federal received $4 million in taxpayer money to clean up the healthcare.gov mess it was responsible for. — Bloomberg
A LITTLE EXTRA
PETA is suing to assign ownership of “Monkey Selfies” to the monkey that took the pics. No, really. — Reuters via Yahoo!
Photo: Flickr user Damian Gadal