An aging U.S. population is already transforming health care as we know it. Impact Presentation Group joins with Health Strategies Group to offer health care company decision-makers tools for responding to the change.The population of the U.S. is rapidly aging. This trend, and others stemming from it, will transform the future of health care as we know it. Insofar as health care is an industry, and health care providers must stay competitive, questions abound regarding the best means of preparing for new scenarios.

Companies want to know how to keep their board members and executive team on the cutting edge with regard to transformative currents shaping the future of health care. To answer this dilemma, Impact Presentations Group offers a widely acclaimed, half-day program featuring the nation’s leading authorities on genomics and aging. This highly interactive workshop can be delivered at an organization’s executive briefing or board retreat.

All the bases are covered by  Mark Goldstein. Considered the nation’s foremost authority on the business implications of an aging society, Mr. Goldstein is well equipped to educate company decision-makers on topics such as the new supply in genomics medicine and demands of the new mature consumer.

As waves of discovery in biotechnology and genomics gain force, significant implications arise for all health care sectors. Topics addressed in the “New Supply” module include: erosion of the private health insurance model; the rise of an “ownership” society; substantial expansion of services available; skewing of optimal and cost-effective assessments of health status; greatly activated consumers; the convergence of genomics, robotics, and nanotechnologies; widening use of drug interventions, and reclassification of therapeutic modalities.

Through this discussion, attendees will receive a broad and detailed picture of biotechnology today and how it fits into the context of our health care system.That context includes an increasing number of mature Americans – and, in particular, more mature Americans with money to spend. The “New Demand” module will include: Generations of Medicine, a multi-media exploration of who we have been and who we’re becoming; explanations of four trends that will transform the future of healthcare and two trends changing the healthcare consumer; new research on the defining characteristics of the “new mature consumer”; what the longevity revolution means for the concept of growing old; the use of consumer choice models and retail health markets; the task of healthcare decision-making in a multi-generational society, and ten crises health care leadership will face in the 21st century.

After this module, attendees will be thoroughly informed about likely shifts in demands on the health care system.

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