Abstract

PurposePersonalized medicine (PM) encompasses a set of procedures, technologies and medications; the term became more prominent from the 2000s onwards and stems from the mapping of the human genome. The purposes of this study were to analyse the development stage of the process of technological innovation for PM and the obstacles that prevent PM from being adopted in the public health system in Brazil.Design/methodology/approachAs a research method, this paper opts for a case study carried out at the Hospital das Clínicas, which belongs to São Paulo Medical School. In total, 22 in-depth interviews were carried out at the hospital to identify current practices in PM, future prospects and barriers imposed to the adoption of PM technologies in public health.FindingsPersonalized or precision medicine is already a reality for a small portion of the Brazilian population and is gradually gaining ground in public health care. One finding is that such changes are occurring in a disjointed manner in an incomplete and under development health innovation system. The analysis pointed out that the obstacles identified in Brazil are the same as those faced by high-income countries such as regulation, lack of clinical studies and need to adapt clinical studies to PM. They appear in all stages of the innovation cycle, from research to widespread use.Research limitations/implicationsThe research method was a case study, so the findings cannot be extrapolated to other contexts. A limited number of professionals were interviewed, their opinions may not reflect those of their organizations.Originality/valueThere are several studies that discuss how health-care systems in high-income countries could incorporate these new technologies, but only a few focuses on low or middle-income countries such as Brazil.

Highlights

  • Personalized medicine (PM) involves a set of procedures, technologies and medications; the term became influential during the 2000s

  • This study aims to analyze how this innovation can be absorbed and used in Brazilian public health

  • The organization studied was the Hospital das Clínicas, which belongs to São Paulo Medical School, São Paulo Department of Health, the National Commission for the Incorporation of Technology in the Public Health System, established national companies, investors and startups

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Personalized medicine (PM) involves a set of procedures, technologies and medications; the term became influential during the 2000s. PM is expected to generate significant benefits for populations. It was propelled by the confluence of two technological revolutions – the mapping of the genome and information and communication technologies. © Claudia Pavani and Guilherme Ary Plonski. The full terms of this licence maybe seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

Objectives
Findings
Methods
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call