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Mashup Score: 1Author - 1 month(s) ago
BiGS Actionable Intelligence: Although the women’s health technology sector is growing rapidly, female “FemTech” entrepreneurs still struggle to find the talent they need to succeed. For the market to reach its full potential, men need to overcome their unease about female bodies, a Harvard Business School professor says. For many female inventors, helping other women is a key motivator. In fact, research by Harvard Business School Associate Professor Rem Koning found that all-female teams of inventors
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Author - 1 month(s) ago
BiGS Actionable Intelligence: Although the women’s health technology sector is growing rapidly, female “FemTech” entrepreneurs still struggle to find the talent they need to succeed. For the market to reach its full potential, men need to overcome their unease about female bodies, a Harvard Business School professor says. For many female inventors, helping other women is a key motivator. In fact, research by Harvard Business School Associate Professor Rem Koning found that all-female teams of inventors
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Author - 1 month(s) ago
BiGS Actionable Intelligence: Although the women’s health technology sector is growing rapidly, female “FemTech” entrepreneurs still struggle to find the talent they need to succeed. For the market to reach its full potential, men need to overcome their unease about female bodies, a Harvard Business School professor says. For many female inventors, helping other women is a key motivator. In fact, research by Harvard Business School Associate Professor Rem Koning found that all-female teams of inventors
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1
Privacy Preference CenterWhen you visit any website, it may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. This information might be about you, your preferences or your device and is mostly used to make the site work as you expect it to. The information does not usually directly identify you, but it can give you a more personalized web experience. Because we respect…
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Managing Your Life - Coronavirus - Harvard Business School - 3 year(s) ago
Navigating Pandemic Fatigue as a Working Parentby Stewart D. Friedman and Alyssa F. Westring …
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet-
Mon. Plan w purpose. Energy: limited. Rx, 1. Everything takes longer than expected (Hofstadter’s law). 2. COVID: control what we can. Double mask. 3. Write it down. 4. Rivet priorities into schedule. 5. Not optional: exercise, sleep, hobbies. https://t.co/Q7oyuDCfbM # burnout https://t.co/NNtuxFX63A
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Mashup Score: 0Direct to Patient - Kraft Accelerator - Harvard Business School - 4 year(s) ago
Educating & empowering patients Patients are at the center of everything. Researchers rely on their data – genomic, immune, clinical, and experiential – to understand what drives disease. This in turn enables drug developers to create more effective therapies and gets patients into the right clinical trials. Unfortunately, most patients don’t realize the…
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
Clayton M. ChristensenPhoto: Evgenia Eliseeva BOSTON, MA—Clayton M. Christensen, Harvard Business School’s Kim B. Clark Professor of Business Administration, acclaimed author and teacher, and the world’s foremost authority on disruptive innovation, died on January 23, 2020, surrounded by his loving family. Christensen was 67 years old. Christensen joined the HBS faculty in 1992. He…
Source: www.hbs.eduCategories: Healthcare ProfessionalsTweet
Do girls have cooties? Male investors and would-be employees often act that way, according to @orgRem of @Harvard. Men's squeamishness about women's bodies is undermining female entrepreneurship and innovations that could improve women's health, he says. https://t.co/OuDjBbhxwc