Insights from leading experts on real-world clinical adoption of Virtual Humans and strategic leadership
Clinical Adoption: How can Virtual Humans be integrated into clinical workflows to deliver real value for the healthcare industry?
Interview 1: Strategic direction and ELEM’s vision – Christopher Morton (CEO, ELEM Biotech) at VHGS II
Christopher Morton, CEO of ELEM Biotech, reflects on the outcomes of the Virtual Human Global Summit II and shares his vision for scaling Virtual Human and biomedical simulation technologies. He discusses the growing alignment between industry, research, and regulators, and the strategic role that ELEM plays in advancing computational medicine globally.
💊 “Today, medicine is broadly empirical. Experience is what will give practitioners the possibility to make the best decisions in the fastest possible time.”
Interview 2: Real-world clinical adoption, hospital workflow integration – Antoni Gilabert (Hospital del Mar) at VHGS II
Antoni Gilabert, Director at Hospital del Mar, shares insights on how Virtual Human technologies can be integrated into hospital workflows and support clinical decision-making. He highlights how when professionals, hospitals, and policymakers operate at different speeds, real progress in healthcare is hindered.
💊 “When micro-level reality, meso-level management, and macro-level policy aren’t synchronized, decisions slow down, processes become inefficient, and the impact on patients is delayed. Finally they are starting to move in harmony, creating the conditions for better decisions, better processes, and much better outcomes”.
Interview 3: Clinical adoption of Digital Twins into hospital, workflows or trials – Eric Stahlberg (Executive administrative director at MD Anderson Cancer Center) at VHGS II
Eric Stahlberg (Executive administrative director at MD Anderson Cancer Center) shares three good practices for the clinical adoption of Digital Twins, from research to real-world clinical workflows:
- Start with a clear clinical question: Digital Twins should begin with a concrete medical problem that can be meaningfully improved through simulation.
- Keep models simple to build trust: Clinical adoption depends on models that are understandable, reliable, and fit for purpose.
- Collaboration across teams is essential: Digital Twins must be developed collaboratively to ensure they integrate smoothly into hospital workflows
Thanks to events like VHGS II, collaboration is accelerating, and the impact is just around the corner.
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