GRYT Health Partners with Bristol Myers Squibb to Host Third Annual Virtual Cancer Conference

Dave Craig, two-time cancer survivor, co-founder and CEO of GRYT Health, a digital oncology company that empowers people to be in charge of their own health through education, engagement and support, discusses the partnership with Bristol Myers Squibb to host the third annual Global Virtual Cancer Conference (GVCC) November 11-13, 2021.   The conference is a completely free and virtual program designed to bring resources and a voice to patients regardless of their geography, finances, or treatment status.    Since its inception in 2019, GVCC had over 5,000 attendees from 50 countries, featured 200 speakers and housed 100 virtual booths from patient advocacy organizations.    He also talks about why GVCC was created and how it is transforming the way pharma listens to patients.

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Uprise Health – Addressing Mental Health Concerns in the Workplace

Dr. Jay Spence, PhD, clinical psychologist and Chief Product Officer at Uprise Health discusses why it’s so vital for employers and health plans to offer validated, timely and coordinated mental health care that’s proactive and preventative. They offer new digitally-enabled mental health services, including clinically-validated, self-guided mental health and wellbeing coaching, and chronic condition management. 

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COVID-19 Vaccine and Fertility Misinformation

Dr. Nora Colburn, MD, MPH, an infectious disease expert and Clinical Assistant Professor at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center discusses the lack of any evidence to support that the COVID-19 vaccine causes infertility or any problems during pregnancy and that it may offer pregnant women who receive the vaccine protection that’s passed along to their newborn. She debunks common vaccine myths – especially those concerning pregnant women – and talks about ways to identify credible sources of medical information.

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Caring Cross – Poised To Reduce Cost Burden of CAR-T Cell Therapy

Dr. Boro Dropulic, PhD, MBA, co-founder and Executive Director of Caring Cross, a 501(c)(3) non-profit dedicated to accelerating the development of advanced medicines and enabling access to cures for all patients, everywhere discusses chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy as a groundbreaking innovation that has shown significant promise in certain cancer indications and could provide curative intervention for multiple cancers, genetic diseases, infectious diseases and other disorders and how the vast potential of CAR-T cell therapy is restricted by the high cost of treatment, which can exceed $400,000, excluding hospital fees. Caring Cross is poised to reduce this cost burden by mobilizing a community of healthcare professionals, scientists, engineers, community advocates, donors, investors and business leaders to enable the development of affordable solutions for current manufacturing methods of CAR-T cell and other advanced therapies; improve access by supporting a decentralized manufacturing model where the final cell product is produced at a reduced cost at the hospital or place-of-care, rather than sent to a centralized corporate manufacturing hub, and facilitate continual advanced technology development that reduces cost and improves access to these therapies. 

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Caring Cross – Development of CAR-T Therapy for HIV

Dr. Boro Dropulic, PhD, MBA, co-founder and Executive Director at Caring Cross, a 501(c)(3) non-profit dedicated to accelerating the development  of advanced medicines  and enabling access to cures for all patients, everywhere.   They have announced their first initiative focused on  chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) -T cell therapy for HIV utilizing manufacturing and distribution models that enable affordability and accessibility of these therapies to diverse patient populations and treatment indications. The HIV program they have developed is an anti-HIV duoCAR-T cell therapeutic candidate that potently suppresses HIV and eliminates HIV-expressing cells in vitro and in animal models.   This work was published in a 2019 paper in Science Translational Medicine. HIV-targeted CAR-both eliminated HIV-infected cells and protected CD4-T cells from infection in relevant animal models, outpacing other current approaches.    On this strong scientific foundation, a Phase 1/2a clinical trial has been cleared by the FDA to start enrolling patients at the University of California, San Francisco and a second site is planned at the University of California, Davis. 

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Sickle Cell Awareness

Dr. Kim Smith-Whitley, MD, Executive Vice President and Head of Research and Development at Global Blood Therapeutics (GBT), discusses sickle cell disease (SCD) and health disparities affecting patients, challenges with access to care, and how new developments may impact the community. She talks about HIV as an example of how investment in a community and increasing resources is of vital importance when it comes to health equity and how this approach can also work for SCD, as well as ways industry is working to enhance health equity. She also talks about news regarding the COVID-19 vaccine booster for immunocompromised patients. To learn more about how GBT is working to change the treatment paradigm in sickle cell disease, while helping the community advocate for quality care, visit Global Blood Therapeutics’ website.

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Malnutrition’s Role in COVID-19

Dr. Louis Ehwerhemuepha, PhD, ​Manager, Computational Research at Children’s Health Orange County (CHOC) ​and Dr. Kenneth Grant, ​pediatric ​gastroenterologist​ at ​CHOC in ​California discuss new research led by CHOC that found that for malnourished children and adults who contract COVID-19, the outcome could lead to mechanical ventilation or death. He talks about the long-term effects of malnutrition on COVID-19 outcomes, details of the research, how public intervention can mitigate the higher likelihood of severe COVID, and resources for those experiencing malnourishment at home or within their community. 

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How Stress Among Older Students Can Trigger Eating Disorders

Melissa Orshan-Spann, Ph.D, CEDS-S, Chief Clinical Officer at Monte Nido & Affiliates, a company that provides treatment for eating disorders, will today discusses stressful factors that may impact students’ weight fluctuations, correlations between a new school year and eating habits, strategies to prevent eating disorder relapse, and suggestions on ways parents can stay connected with their children who are living on campus. 

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