| Literature DB >> 23369646 |
Jiebai Zhou1, Duojiao Wu, Xinqing Liu, Shuoqi Yuan, Xiaoqiu Yang, Xiangdong Wang.
Abstract
Health systems globally face challenges and opportunities in balancing quality, access, and cost, where clinical and translational medicine (CTM) should play more important and powerful roles in the identification, development and validation of solutions and strategies. Strategic collaboration can gather global strengths and resources and improve health systems, care delivery, regulations and policies. CTM-driven innovation and development has the potential to achieve step-change improvements across three dimensions. Thus, we have the reasons to believe that CTM will play even more roles in the development of new diagnostics, therapies, healthcare, and policies and SAS-CTM will become more and more important platform to obtain the latest development in CTM internationally and explore new opportunities in the international collaborations.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23369646 PMCID: PMC3560983 DOI: 10.1186/2001-1326-1-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Figure 1Biological systems are complex and multidimensional and require a systems approach. Disease and drug action originate at levels of cellular and molecular components, while physiological effects (e.g. symptoms, drug action) are at organ levels. Clinical and translational medicine should optimally link all circles and processes, e.g. discovery science, early translation steps, clinical trials, clinical practice guidelines, performance measures, and outcomes together.