ROME (ITALPRESS) – “An event like the World Health Forum Veneto confirmed the importance of having an integrated vision in order to be able to face the global challenges of healthcare.” With these words, the president of the Veneto Region, Luca Zaia, greeted and closed the second edition of the World Health Forum at the Padova Congress convention center together with the Veneto Region’s Health Councillor, Manuela Lanzarin, who shared with Professor Giorgio Palù, scientific director of the World Health Forum, a decalogue intended for the new generations that will have to act as a bridge between the past and the present of the scientific and health world.
“A healthcare,” he adds, “that must focus on prevention, innovation in pharmaceuticals to boost Italian research, led by Artificial Intelligence and biotechnology for precision medicine. At the center of our agenda are several goals, including improving accessibility in the healthcare system with the decrease of waiting services by focusing on periodic monitoring, artificial intelligence and the professionalism of our healthcare professionals to continue to be a national benchmark model. The outcome of these three days will serve as an incentive to foster international collaborations such as those established during the event with experts from such prestigious institutions as Harvard Medical School, King’s College London and Imperial College London and the more than 35 Italian and international universities, with world-renowned scientists and leading research institutions that in the 16 sessions promoted scientific education in a rapidly evolving context. I thank all those who supported and contributed to the realization of the World Health Forum, from the Scientific Committee chaired by Professor Palù to the City of Padua; from the University of Padua to the Padua Chamber of Commerce; from the Cariparo Foundation to the School of Public Health Foundation and Venicepromex. A great team that is already laying the groundwork for next year’s edition.”
“Summing up this three-day event in Padua, in which we talked about science, perspectives of medicine and new frontiers, we can confirm that Veneto is making great strides in this field, thanks also to the integration between the world of health care and the academic world, with the hospital companies of Padua and Verona allowing us to operate in university settings integrating care and research. Today, during the third and final day of the Veneto World Health Forum, we shared with the scientific world a decalogue for the healthcare of the future, an evolution that is indispensable to remain competitive while keeping caring for people as a priority,” Lanzarin stressed. “From prevention, with the determinants of health, to the study of genetic and degenerative diseases that represent one of the many challenges of the future, moving on to precision medicine, which, thanks to artificial intelligence and new technologies, will be increasingly high-performing. All this without forgetting pharmaceutical innovation and the need to strengthen research.”
Di seguito i punti del decalogo:
One Health: oltre le pandemie;
I determinanti di Salute: il ruolo della prevenzione;
Innovazione in farmaceutica: quali politiche per potenziare la ricerca italiana?;
Biotecnologie e Medicina di precisione: nuovo impulso dall’Intelligenza Artificiale e dalle nuove tecnologie (RNA, genome editing, ecc);
Quali prospettive per le malattie genetiche e degenerative?;
Finanza, newCo, Biotech, Industria Farmaceutica: leva Fiscale e mercato azionario per un incremento allo sviluppo;
Nuovi farmaci per il cancro: necessità di uniformare e semplificare la regolamentazione Europea e impatto su SSN e accessibilità.;
I dataset dalla diagnosi allo sviluppo di farmaci: rapporti tra Istituzioni nazionali ed europee;
Informazione scientifica nei confronti di una scienza biomedica in rapida evoluzione. Ruolo dei giornalisti scientifici: come formare i comunicatori;
Implicazioni bioetiche della medicina di precisione.
-Photo press office Veneto region-.
(ITALPRESS).