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Host: Kavita Patel, MD, Nonresident Fellow, The Brookings Institution; Venture Partner, New Enterprise Associates

Discussion Leaders:
Senator Tom Daschle, Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader; Founder & CEO, The Daschle Group
Ezekiel J. Emanuel, MD, Vice Provost for Global Initiatives, Co-Director, Healthcare Transformation Institute, University of Pennsylvania

• Biden’s presidential campaign health care policy positions including strengthening the ACA, reducing Medicare age, government managed public option, and prescription drug reform
• Projections for Congressional focus on health care policy – how much influence might a left-leaning Congress have?

Read the Insider article written by Gabe Perna that recaps this webcast here.

Health Evolution Executive Briefings
The Biden’s Health Care Policy – How Big Is the Aperture for Change? webcast is part of our Executive Briefings series, which are an opportunity for health care CEOs and senior leaders to connect and collaborate – both virtually and in-person to share insights and lessons learned to address critical issues facing the industry. These gatherings are designed for health care leaders to engage in discussions featuring perspectives from leading payer, provider, life science and government thought leaders, innovators and stakeholders.

To register for an upcoming webcast or watch on-demand recordings of past webcasts, visit our Executive Briefings page.


Innovation Lab

The Innovation Lab is a compilation of successful innovations focused on key CEO actions and takeaways. The Innovation Lab includes a series of Impact Reports, Innovation Guides and Innovator CEO Profiles that showcase examples of how provider, payer or life science organizations are using technology and solutions to achieve key business goals and strategic priorities.


COVID-19 Innovation Guide

Returning to the next normal of operations and care delivery will require establishing trust and ensuring safety for employees and consumers as well as leveraging digital technologies — all of which set the stage for adopting new models of care. This first in a three-part series of reports shares lessons learned by Providence, the pandemic’s original ground zero in the U.S. Read the report.

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