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Professional Medical Education Excellence: Structures, Resources, Services & Performance Levels to Optimize Medical Device Education Groups

ID: PSM-269


Features:

20 Info Graphics

55 Data Graphics

350+ Metrics

17 Narratives

6 Best Practices


Pages: 85


Published: Pre-2019


Delivery Format: Shipped


 

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919-403-0251

  • STUDY OVERVIEW
  • BENCHMARK CLASS
  • STUDY SNAPSHOT
  • KEY FINDINGS
  • VIEW TOC AND LIST OF EXHIBITS
The medical device sector faces a constantly changing landscape for delivering medical education to healthcare professionals on the safe and effective use of devices. As regulatory and market pressures reshape approaches to device training, organizations are struggling to have the right staffing, investment, program types and delivery platforms to provide education opportunities for healthcare practitioners.


This report will help incumbent companies to optimize their medical education capabilities, efficiency and effectiveness. An in-depth analysis of the industry shows that there is a core set of factors in successful medical education groups: structure and activities of the medical education function, effective levels of professional medical education staffing, the role of the medical education group in key activities (including involvement with thought leaders and professional societies) and resource allocation by region and program type.

Best Practices®, LLC’s report, Professional Medical Education Excellence: Structures, Resources, Services & Performance Levels to Optimize Medical Device Education Groups explores each of these aspects and provides a pharmaceutical segment as well as a data segment representing other industries.

This comprehensive benchmark report analyzes a broad range of medical education factors, and delivers qualitative and quantitative data on staffing, services, structures, investments and much more. Medical education leadership will benefit using this intelligence to evaluate their organization’s resource levels relative to other market leaders.

In addition, the study presents medical education leader’s perspective on the current and future trends and direction of medical education for field-based medical educators, technological changes and spending changes. It also includes insightful analyses on an array of pitfalls that can affect the medical education function, including the changing business environment and compliance management.

Industries Profiled:
Health Care; Pharmaceutical; Diagnostic; Biotech; Consulting; Research; Medical Device; Chemical; Consumer Products; Orthopaedics


Companies Profiled:
Abbott; Dendreon Corporation; Gilead Sciences; Epigenomics AG; Boehringer Ingelheim; Manthan Services; GlaxoSmithKline; Alcon Laboratories; Ipsen; Boston Scientific; Johnson & Johnson; Amylin; Laboratories Esteve; Bristol-Myers Squibb; MedImmune; Astellas; Medtronic; Celgene; Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma; AstraZeneca; Novo Nordisk; Cephalon; Orthofix; Inc.; Pfizer; Baxter Healthcare; Regeneron; Cubist Pharmaceuticals; Roche; Bayer Healthcare; Sanofi-Aventis; EMD Serono; Shire; Biogen Idec; Smith & Nephew; Stryker; Takeda Pharmaceuticals; Zimmer

Study Snapshot

The medical education landscape for the device sector is a complex environment with new technologies, budget pressures and expanding global needs all combining to create challenges for education leaders. This timely study presents benchmarks across the critical operational aspects of medical education groups including, staffing, budgets, activity roles, technology applications, program development/deployment and geographical focus for programs/budget.
Best Practices®, LLC used both field surveys and interviews to complete this study. In all, 40 medical education leaders from 35 different companies from the pharmaceutical and medical device sectors contributed data. Participants included 14 medical education leaders from 10 medical device companies and 26 leaders from 25 pharma companies. In-depth interviews were conducted with veteran medical device leaders from four organizations.

Key Findings

In terms of geographic focus, Medical Education is uniquely positioned to help fuel organizations’ growth in emerging areas like China and India. Despite the growing revenue stream produced by emerging areas, device and pharma companies are devoting to Asia-emerging areas few of their total MedEd FTEs (device 7.5% vs. pharma 1.9%), few of their total MedEd programs (device 5.8% vs. pharma 1.4%) and relatively little of their total MedEd budget (device 6.4% vs. pharma 1.9%).

  • Technology-based programs will increase in the next two years in both device and pharma sectors - but device participants foresee an explosion with 58 percent projecting more than 30 percent growth whereas in pharma, 61 percent of participants project increases of 10 percent or more.
Table of Contents

Executive Summary
  • Business Issue & Objectives, p.4
  • Project Blueprint, p.5
  • Key Findings, p.6-8
  • Participants, p.9-10
Main Deck
  • Medical Education Landscape, p.11
  • Participant Overview Information, p.12-15
  • Organizational Fit & Geographic Focus, p.16-28
  • Staffing Benchmarks & Program Trends, p.29-45
  • Roles for Key Activities & Program Deployment, p.46-60
  • Budget Benchmarks & Allocation Trends, p.61-74
  • Trends & Directions, p. 75-83
  • About Best Practices, LLC, p.84-85