'Unite to Cure' event in the
Vatican focuses on impact of technology in society
"Unite to Cure" is a 3-day conference taking place in the Vatican's New Synod Hall. |
A 3-day international conference promoted by the Pontifical
Council for Culture aims discuss the impact of new technology on society and
culture. Organized in collaboration with the Cura Foundation, the “Unite To
Cure” event is taking place in the Vatican’s New Synod Hall.
By Linda Bordoni
At its fourth edition, the international “Unite to Cure”
conference sees the presence of leading experts in the fields of health, media,
entertainment and technology. Faith-based organizations and government
representatives are also present to examine the role of artificial
intelligence, virtual reality and big data in health care delivery, and to
discuss how technology can be used to extend health care access to less
developed nations and to the under-served.
Pope Francis is scheduled to meet all
participants of the Unite to Cure conference on Saturday morning.
Professor David Pearce is the Executive Vice
President of Research at Sanford Health, one of the largest health care systems
in the United States.
His expertise lies in children’s health and he told Vatican
News about his contribution to the conference:
Professor Pierce explained his specific background is in
rare diseases of children, and that overall, he oversees all the clinical
trials and all the basic and transitional research at Sanford Health.
At the confernence, he said, he is present in two roles:
“To push the agenda in terms of how we are really leading
the cutting edge in curing children with these debilitating rare disease” he
said.
And in demonstrating how you can integrate a health system
into a research programme or vice-versa:
“research is the way forward – treatments and cures of
tomorrow are what we are developing - but how to actually activate them and get
them rolling in a health system, working with the many aspects of a health system
is an important way forward” he said.
Finding the cure is a team sport
Professor Pierce describes medical research as a team sport:
“Research is a team sport, curing people is a team sport! So we are here to
build partnerships and collaborations, to learn from others and maybe teach
others as well”.
Speaking of some of the major challenges he faces Pierce
points out that it is fortunate that rare diseases are in fact rare, but this
means that it is very hard to work on diseases that affect few patients.
That’s why, he says, at Sanford we have a very good
telemedicine programme through which we can learn to study children across the
US “because you don’t want to start moving them around when they are sick; you
need to be able to study them and to be able to communicate with the physicians
throughout the country, and you need to be able to communicate what those
treatments and advances are as quickly as possible”.
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