SIGNALS
NO.45
Genome BC News | Winter 2014
Contents Feature Story | Message from the President & CEO | Profile | Partnerships In Action | News & Announcements
BC: THE “PERSONALIZED MEDICINE” PROVINCE
Countries around the world are experiencing continuing increases in healthcare costs driven by ageing populations, chronic care patients, costs of new drugs, challenges due to complications of adverse drug reactions and lack of treatment efficacy, all compounded by ageing infrastructure in hospitals and clinics. Technological advances and innovative interventions are required to both stabilize costs and improve population health. Genomics is leading the way to developing diagnostic tools (such as blood tests) and patient-tailored medical treatments. It is anticipated that improved early diagnosis and treatments will address many of these challenges. Here in BC we have areas of leadership in adopting new technologies in healthcare and we are working to become a centre of personalized medicine in Canada. We have the technology, talent and tenacity to foster a powerful shift in the healthcare system. We already see evidence that a genomics-based approach works to treat disease better, as evidenced by the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS (see feature in our Partnerships in Action section). BC has many advantages that can contribute to excellence in personalized medicine:
www.genomebc.ca
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A population of 4.6 million who have universal access to publicly funded healthcare with a singlepayer system;
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A well-educated and health-conscious population;
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A critical mass of researchers, physicians and healthcare providers keen to make genomic and personalized medicine approaches a success;
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A single medical school with connections to many communities and healthcare organizations, allowing rapid communication of personalized medicine practices;
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One of the world’s leading genome sciences centres, the Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre, which can rapidly sequence and interpret tumour and normal genomes;
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An excellent record in biomedical research that is now maturing to the point where translation to clinical practice is a reality;
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Emerging schools of population and public health in our universities; and
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A networked and centralized system of care in key disease areas (e.g., cancer, transplantation, pediatric ailments, cardiac, renal and infectious diseases) with strongly integrated research and education components.