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Healthcare CEOs on how the pandemic is shaping the future of work

Apr 30, 2021, 21:08 IST
Business Insider
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla.Crystal Cox/Insider

Hello,

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Welcome to Insider Healthcare. I'm Andrew Dunn and this week in healthcare news:

If you're new to this newsletter, sign up here. Tips, comments? Email me at adunn@insider.com or tweet @AndrewE_Dunn.

After the pandemic, what's next?

How much permanent change will the pandemic leave on the business world? About a year ago, Insider's newsroom asked more than 200 CEOs for their initial thoughts.

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Now, we've connected again with several dozen C-suite execs, including some big names in the healthcare space: Anthem's Gail Boudreaux, Google Health's Dr. Karen DeSalvo, and Pfizer's Albert Bourla among others.

These are the people steering healthcare's future, and we got them to share their thoughts on the future of work-from-home, the industry's diversity and equity challenges, and lessons learned from the past year. (You can also check out the answers of some non-healthcare CEOs at places like Dropbox, Ogilvy, and Hooters.)

Check out their answers here.

And that wasn't Insider's only newsroom-wide CEO-based project to roll out this week. I profiled Pfizer's Bourla and the journey that has been the pharma giant's COVID-19 vaccine program for Insider's inaugural list of most transformative CEOs.

Bourla is hoping to usher in a new era at Pfizer, applying the R&D learnings from its coronavirus vaccine work to other diseases and medicines.

"We saw what we can do if we put focus, if we cut bureaucracy, if we trust scientists," Bourla told me. "That's something that needs to be repeated not only in COVID."

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Here's the full project, including the CEOs of GM, Adobe, and Nvidia>>

The most transformative CEOs of 2021

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar.Samuel Corum/Pool/AFP

Takeaways from Sen. Amy Klobuchar's new book on antitrust

Insider Book Club, anyone? Senior healthcare reporter Allison DeAngelis synthesized Sen. Amy Klobuchar's 624-page book on antitrust into three digestible takeaways.

One clear conclusion is top lawmakers are looking closer and closer at the pharmaceutical industry's M&A behavior.

Healthcare fellow Patricia Kelly Yeo also has a new book on her radar in Dr. Jen Gunter's "The Menopause Manifesto," set to come out next month.

Her advice on approaching menopause is the timeless, simple stuff: quit smoking, exercise, and eat healthy.

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It's not a book club if everyone isn't reading.

If you missed it, I pulled out a few key takeaways from Walter Isaacson's best-selling biography of Jennifer Doudna and the burgeoning field of gene-editing.

What else should be on our nightstands? Send me recommendations at adunn@insider.com - healthcare-related or not.

I'm now finishing up New York Times science writer Carl Zimmer's new book on a basic yet profound question: What is life? In touring labs making organoids and discussing viruses that invade bacteria, Zimmer shows how blurry the line can be. Hence the title: Life's Edge.

Check out Klobuchar's perspective on monopolies here>>

3 takeaways from a top Democratic senator's new book on monopolies that should have Big Pharma worried

Moderna protocol files for COVID-19 vaccinations.Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images

The CDC eases mask-wearing guidance for the fully vaccinated

The pandemic is headed in different directions in different parts of the world.

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Here in the US, things are looking up, as they have for a few weeks. 55% of adults in the US have gotten at least one shot. And the CDC recently outlined the impact that getting immunized can have on everyone's lives, including less mask-wearing outdoors.

CDC: Fully vaccinated people can go maskless outside to exercise, dine, or socialize

In fact, things have gotten so cheery that there's a whole movement brewing around this summer in the US. The "sextech" market has never been hotter, according to startup founders and investors who spoke with Insider's Melia Russell and April Joyner.

It's the free market's natural reaction to calls for a "Hot Vax Summer," I suppose.

That's all great news, I guess, for America. But these domestic discussions - of shedding masks and awaiting the summer fun - are particularly jarring when considering the direness of the crisis in places like India and Brazil.

The US said it will help India out, donating vaccines, drugs, and protective gear. Still, the devastation is deeply underway, with records being routinely broken for new infections and deaths.

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India's vulnerabilities also shed light on other countries that could be at risk of COVID-19 spikes, writes Aria Bendix, Insider's senior science reporter. The story reads as the latest plea for all of us to keep a bit of humility and diligence in the face of this pandemic.

Read the full story>>

The 4 factors that have fueled India's harrowing coronavirus surge

Finally, here's what else is happening in healthcare this week:

- Andrew

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