6th Digital Pharma & Life Sciences Conference 2011

22 February 2011, Wiesbaden, Germany.
For the sixth time Microsoft and its partners will be holding the Digital Pharma & Life Sciences conference. The lecture event and exhibition is aimed at the pharmaceutical, chemical and life sciences industries, showing current projects and innovative technologies that support greater sustainability, cost efficiency and competitiveness in and through IT.

IT has become a critical competitive factor as an instrument for sustainable climate and environmental protection. The framework is set by international initiatives by industries and governments: for example more than 500 investors request global listed companies to report their CO2 relevant business data through the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) from the UK. Global initiatives for Green Chemistry such as the conventions from Stockholm, Rotterdam and Basel, the OECD and the regulatory authorities of developed countries are working to create global standards for sustainable risk and chemicals management.

For this reason, the Digital Pharma & Life Sciences conference 2011 is focussing on the topics "Green IT – Green Chemistry". With the focus on "Green in IT", experts will discuss latest developments of Green IT technologies on the basis of recent successful projects in order to make processes more efficient, save resources and energy and thereby reduce costs. These include concepts for IT virtualization in controlling chemical production or cloud computing for pharmaceutical research.

The "Green through IT" presentations will show pioneering Green Chemistry projects that ensure sustainability in production, research and development and overall global supply chains. Leading companies from the chemical, pharmaceutical and life sciences industries demonstrate how they coordinate production and logistics processes better through intelligent technologies, plan forward-looking and therefore design initiatives for more economically measurable sustainability.

The conference takes place on 22nd February 2011 in the Kurhaus Wiesbaden and is aimed at decision makers and experts from the fields of IT and business management, research and development, business development management, product management, production, quality management, sales and controlling.

During the accompanying exhibition, the partners of the Digital Pharma & Life Sciences initiative will show latest IT technologies and reference projects. On the eve of the conference on 21st February 2011, an exclusive dinner will take place with all the speakers, conference participants and partners of the initiative.

Further information for registration, the agenda and logistic details are available at:
http://www.digitalpharma.de

Most Popular Now

Do Fitness Apps do More Harm than Good?

A study published in the British Journal of Health Psychology reveals the negative behavioral and psychological consequences of commercial fitness apps reported by users on social media. These impacts may...

AI Tool Beats Humans at Detecting Parasi…

Scientists at ARUP Laboratories have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) tool that detects intestinal parasites in stool samples more quickly and accurately than traditional methods, potentially transforming how labs diagnose...

Making Cancer Vaccines More Personal

In a new study, University of Arizona researchers created a model for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, a type of skin cancer, and identified two mutated tumor proteins, or neoantigens, that...

AI can Better Predict Future Risk for He…

A landmark study led by University' experts has shown that artificial intelligence can better predict how doctors should treat patients following a heart attack. The study, conducted by an international...

A New AI Model Improves the Prediction o…

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed form of cancer in the world among women, with more than 2.3 million cases a year, and continues to be one of the...

AI System Finds Crucial Clues for Diagno…

Doctors often must make critical decisions in minutes, relying on incomplete information. While electronic health records contain vast amounts of patient data, much of it remains difficult to interpret quickly...