Encina Hall
616 Serra St, Stanford, CA 94305
USA
This event will be live-streamed here.
The symposium will focus on the key questions that impact health through the year 2020. How could the 2016 election affect health care in the U.S.? How will payment reform affect health systems, physicians and patients? Are the insurance exchanges viable? What challenges pose the biggest threat to global health? Experts from Stanford and beyond address these topics and more as they discuss the future of health policy.
Agenda:
1:00PM – 1:15PM | Registration | |
1:15PM – 1:45PM | Opening Remarks | Lloyd Minor Douglas Owens Laurence Baker |
1:45PM – 2:15PM | International Health | Grant Miller Eran Bendavid Marcella Alsan |
2:15PM – 3:15PM | Keynote: ACA at Five Years: Progress and Policy Opportunities |
Bob Kocher Q&A with Laurence Baker |
3:15PM – 3:30PM | Break | |
3:30PM – 4:15PM | Payment Reform | David Entwistle Chris Dawes Jay Bhattacharya Laurence Baker |
4:15PM – 4:45PM | Patient Safety and Value | Douglas Owens Kathryn McDonald David Chan |
4:45PM – 5:30PM | American Health Policy: The Election and Beyond |
Kate Bundorf David Studdert Michelle Mello Maria Polyakova |
5:30PM – 5:40PM | Closing Remarks | Laurence Baker Douglas Owens |
5:40PM – 7:00PM | Reception |
Featured Speakers:
Lloyd Minor, Dean, Stanford University School of Medicine
Minor, MD, is a scientist, surgeon and academic leader. He is the Carl and Elizabeth Naumann Dean of the Stanford University School of Medicine, a position he has held since December 2012. Minor leads more than 1,500 faculty and 1,000 students at the oldest medical school in the West and has made precision health — the prevention of disease before it strikes — a hallmark of research, education and patient care at Stanford Medicine.
Bob Kocher,a partner at the Silicon Valley venture capital firm, Venrock
Kocher, MD, is a partner at Venrock who focuses on healthcare IT and services investments and is a consulting professor at Stanford University School of Medicine. He served in the Obama Administration as special assistant to the president for health care and economic policy and was one of the key shapers of the Affordable Care Act.
David Entwistle, President and CEO, Stanford Health Care
Entwistle joined Stanford Health Care as its President and CEO in July, bringing extensive executive experience at leading academic medical centers. Most recently he served as CEO of the University of Utah Hospitals & Clinics, the only academic medical center in the Intermountain West region. While serving at UUHC, Entwistle received the Modern Healthcare “Up and Comers Award,” for significant contributions in health-care administration, management or policy.
Chris Dawes, President and CEO, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital
Christopher G. Dawes became President and Chief Executive Officer of Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford in 1997 after five years of service as Chief Operating Officer. Under his guidance, the hospital, research center and regional medical network has been ranked as one of the best in the nation, as an industry leader in patient safety and innovation in providing a full complement of services for children and expectant mothers.