Exploring New Frontiers in Pharma: Mindsets, Data, AI, and Oracle
Research in Action - En podcast af Oracle Corporation
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How can shifting mindsets fuel the next wave of innovation in the pharmaceutical and life sciences industry? In what ways can we ensure the vast amounts of health data are utilized securely and effectively to foster groundbreaking medical advancements? And how is Oracle's new Health Data Intelligence poised to transform the industry in an unprecedented manner? You’ll learn all that and more with our guest Michael Fronstin, Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer at Oracle Life Sciences, who has worked across nearly every area of the industry from positions at Merck to J&J to Kantar Health and now at Oracle. -------------------------------------------------------- Episode Transcript: 00;00;00;04 - 00;00;26;25 In what ways do the mindsets in the pharma industry need to change? How can we make sure massive amounts of health data is applied to practical effect? And how might Oracle's new Health Data Intelligence platform be an unprecedented game changer? We'll find all that out and more on Research in Action. Hello, welcome to Research in Action, brought to you by Oracle Life Sciences. 00;00;26;25 - 00;00;49;15 I'm Mike Stiles. And today we've got a guest who's been a veteran in the life sciences industry and who knows Oracle Life Sciences quite intimately because the guest is Michael Fronstin, vice president and chief commercial officer at Oracle Life Sciences. He's worked across nearly every area of life sciences, from positions at Merck to J&J to Kantar Health and now at Oracle. 00;00;49;15 - 00;01;11;25 So, Michael, thanks for being here. Thanks, Mike. Happy to be here and thank you so much for hosting this session. Really appreciate it. Great. Well, you know, you're the perfect person to talk to about what I want to talk about, which is changing people's minds and changing how we even approach and think about life sciences. So you've got that to look forward to. 00;01;11;25 - 00;01;34;28 But first, let's learn a little bit more about you. How did your interests and opportunities in life take you down the path that led you to where you are now? Yeah, thanks for that question. That's that's a great question to start out with. I'll tell you that as human beings, we all have something going on in terms of health care, whether it's impacting ourselves or friends or family, everyone's going through something. 00;01;34;28 - 00;01;56;25 At some point. You just don't know what the magnitude is or how long lasting, right? So having patience and empathy is so important. And of course myself, I've gone through things and unfortunately starting at a very early age of 12, I lost my best friend to the brain cancer and from the time I was 12 to the time I was 21, unfortunately, I lost a lot of people to different health ailments. 00;01;57;11 - 00;02;17;10 I guess, climaxing with losing my father when I was 21 years old. During that time, I always thought about health care and how it was impacting the people around me and wondering what could I do? And I felt pretty helpless, to be honest with you during those times, because some young boy don't there and there really wasn't anything I can do. 00;02;17;10 - 00;02;35;01 But as I got older and I went into college, I realized I could make a difference in health care. And that was going to be the industry that I was going to focus on. So I went into social sciences, became a sociologist with a business math background, and went to graduate school for an MBA in health care arbitration. 00;02;35;10 - 00;02;56;07 And that's when really things opened up to me where I started saying, okay, what aspect do I like? Where can I make a scalable impact? And I ended up joining Humana A down in Florida for a year or so, realizing that I can make a difference there and get people enrolled, help them get claims processed and paid. And from there my career took off. 00;02;56;07 - 00;03;21;02 I end up going to Merck, carried the bag and really experience the in office experience back in the days of the early nineties in terms of what patients were experiencing, seeing doctors who were really, really good and so much good at diagnosing patients and treating them in a time where most of the chronic conditions didn't have treatments available and new ones were coming out. 00;03;21;16 - 00;03;53;06 And I'll tell you, it was pretty exciting during these times being at Merck and seeing all these innovations. But I'll tell you, during that time I was really able to focus on one therapeutic area and it wasn't very scalable. It wasn't really having the impact it wanted. And it wasn't until I came to the consulting side of the business, you know, working with dozens of customers and maybe hundreds of brands over the past 20 plus years where I really felt like maybe a direct and indirect impact on people's lives around the globe. 00;03;53;28 - 00;04;16;02 So that's that brings me to today. And now I'm with Oracle Life Sciences, where I feel like it's even bigger and broader and better. So I'm excited about the present. I'm excited about the future. Yeah. You mentioned you kept repeating a phrase that kind of struck stuck with me, which is that you wanted to make a difference. Is that hard to do in the health care space? 00;04;16;02 - 00;04;39;12 I mean, have you been gratified by your ability to do that or has it always been a push and pull? Oh, interesting question. Definitely a push. And so, you know, sometimes you can you can make decisions and get them executed very quickly. Other times, it takes a while to do. You know, you have regulatory bodies that you have to deal with different types of payers around the world. 00;04;39;22 - 00;05;04;19 Decisions are always made quickly. And if it's the right decision because of various reasons, whether it's bureaucracy or internal or external, or you need to generate real world evidence modeling or even publications, we have more than 2000, maybe 3000 publications, and you develop the evidence, you submit the publication. It could take, you know, six months, a year, two years to get it published right? 00;05;04;19 - 00;05;24;14 So things just take time, unfortunately. But yeah, you can make a difference. I feel like I've made a difference. I feel pretty gratified about what I've done. And in the areas of the impact that I've made. So and a lot of it is just make an impact within your world and hoping that you can expand it beyond to make a broader impact. 00;05;24;14 - 00;05;59;11 You were at Kantar Health for like 17 years or so. How did what Kantar does align with Oracle Life Sciences and the idea behind just leveraging technology to benefit customers and partners? I'm actually coming on 19 years since we think about it and you mention it. So when I step back and think about my time at Bert or Change in Merck and the broader industry, life science clients need to accomplish three things in order to get their compound, whether new or existing compound, really the new compounds into the hands of the appropriate patients. 00;05;59;11 - 00;06;24;18 They need to get their drugs approved right by some regulatory authority. They need to get them reimbursed and they need to have a strong launch to drive awareness. Otherwise no one's going to prescribe it or patients. People aren't going to request it, right. So those three things need to need to occur. Kanter Health is really focused on the second and third in terms of the research services and expertise. 00;06;25;00 - 00;07;10;02 So the types of people are. Kanter Help are methodologies, social scientists like epidemiologists, psycho nutrition, these these are the folks that know how to design and conduct research, how to consult on the research from a Real-World evidence perspective and driving insights, evidence from a commercial planning perspective, prioritization, things like that. Where is the Oracle Life Sciences group? The other side of the group is really all about technology and applications predominantly focused on driving clinical trials for regulatory approval, of course, and in the area of pharmacovigilance during those trials and tracking them when those products are in the real world. 00;07;10;06 - 00;07;38;08 Right. Post-marketing authorization. So when you bring these two groups together and these types of people together, the technology, the medical intelligence, the scientific, methodological experience of the cancer health folks, have you got the best of all worlds, right? Technology, data experience combined. You take these wraparound services with the technology in and now our clients are able to see a much higher level of value, if you will. 00;07;38;23 - 00;08;02;25 Well, you've actually been anything but shy in the past about saying how the mindsets in the pharma industry really need to change. So what is the current mindset? And in what ways is it limiting? I'll tell you, the health care industry, including life sciences, has always been a little bit of a laggard in terms of of our movement. 00;08;03;11 - 00;08;30;15 Part of that issue is that we we operate in silos, right? And even within our life science clients or customers, the different cross-functional teams don't always come together. They don't know each other. Sometimes they buy the same data, right? So the inefficiencies of spending more budget than they need to, we're not leveraging the same data for different purposes, and we really need to break down the silos. 00;08;30;29 - 00;08;53;15 I think that from a mindset perspective, individuals on every side of the business really need to step back and pick up their heads and look around, see the big picture, understand where are we going? The data is critically important. Big data was becoming the buzzword ten, 15 years ago, but no one really knew what that B meant. Well, now it's here. 00;08;53;22 - 00;09;14;06 We could do something with big data, right? Is sort of on the fringe. Some people are using it, some people aren't, there hasn't. So this is a time where you could either bury your head in the sand because you don't understand it or you're afraid of it, or you can lean in and figure it out. And if you don't lean in, you're going to be left behind. 00;09;14;06 - 00;09;45;01 So I think we need to break down the silos. People need to step back and see the big picture. And I think they need to take risks and and lean in and it Oracle, that's what we're doing. We're committed to helping, you know, through creating open ecosystems, to breaking down barriers across teams, using our teams. And, you know, hopefully everybody will wind up picking your head up and looking at the big picture and caring more about collaboration and how these things can improve so that innovation moves forward faster. 00;09;45;17 - 00;10;06;25 Is that a realistic ask? I mean, I assume researchers are very busy with their heads down working on what they're working on. Can they can they expand and broaden their view? They have that luxury, Absolutely. It's like anything else, you just have to make the time. You got to take the time to make the time, invest the time to figure it out. 00;10;06;25 - 00;10;26;26 It's not easy. And I'm not saying it's easy by any means, but it's worth it to do. And I remember when I was a rep with Merck, you know, moving to Pennsylvania, the Home Office, the analysis, one of my problems that you get there and if you want pieces of advice when you get there, keep your head up. 00;10;27;13 - 00;10;51;11 And I said, I'm always positive. He said, that's not what he said. Look around, understand what's around you, incorporate it, immerse yourself in things you don't understand. You know, be comfortable being uncomfortable and again, new job, new new house placeholders. How do we find the time, how to figure it out? Right. And I see the people around me and our clients. 00;10;51;11 - 00;11;18;18 I see the people around me at Oracle Life Sciences. The ones who are doing that are the ones that are being most successful. Yeah, I love that. Get, get comfortable being uncomfortable. That's not something people dive into, as is uncomfortableness. But, you know, I don't care if it's industry, politics or even favorite flavor of ice cream. Getting anyone these days to change their mind or change their mindset is really hard. 00;11;18;18 - 00;11;49;09 So getting an industry to collectively think differently, that can't be easy. So what do you see as the biggest challenges to that? And is it that there needs to be some driving force for that? And is that the role Oracle's trying to play? Yeah, it's not easy for sure. All right. So some of the biggest challenges are really the cultures that are existing within and across the industry where people are so busy, right? 00;11;49;11 - 00;12;16;11 They're not set up to work. Cross-functionally The siloed nature that's that's occurring across our industry, even in between clinical care and clinical research, there are gaps. So I think all these different places are causing, you know, challenges in terms of making a difference, getting immersed and taking those risks. People aren't always rewarded for taking risks. So let's say it happens. 00;12;16;11 - 00;12;40;29 Let's say there's a shift in mindset and we're thinking more about leading with knowledge and information and looking at that big picture. What opportunities does that present for both the industry and for me when I get sick? Yeah, no, that's a great question as well. So for the industry, I think we'll be able to actually bring compounds to the to the marketplace more quickly. 00;12;41;10 - 00;13;30;00 Right. For you as an individual or us as individuals, all of us will be able to have more options, both clinical research as a care option. Right? Right now, only 3% of eligible patients participate in a clinical trial. Right. If we're able to take information and put it back in the electronic health record or h.r. System so that doctors can look at it at the point of care and make decisions whether it's about what is your care that they want to prescribe or it's about how are these products impacting you as a patient from a pharmacovigilance or really a tolerability or safety perspective, they're able to adjust very quickly right there on the fly, right? 00;13;30;00 - 00;13;51;29 They'll have more data at their fingertips, as we put it in. And that also could be recruiting patients into clinical trials. Right. So they don't know what's the inclusion exclusion criteria. Look it up. So how can you at their fingertips and knowing that this patient can just walk in the door for these patients scheduled to walk in this week, they're eligible. 00;13;52;00 - 00;14;12;02 Let me make sure that I talk to them about that so that they have other options that will help them get well. Yeah, So it's a good payoff. Your answer to this can be Mike, why don't you just mind your own business, but ask Oracle recently combined their Oracle Health and their Oracle Life Sciences divisions. Why did they do that? 00;14;12;11 - 00;14;37;06 Well, I'll tell you, I won't tell you to mind your own business. This is sort of the the biggest payoff I think we're seeing is movement that we've seen in health care. So the acquisition of Cerner by Oracle was just enormous. And it Cerner, these are your cancer health group is part of it really also was a big deal, right? 00;14;37;12 - 00;15;06;10 Because now we can take what's happening in health, in the clinic, in the hospital, in the offices and combine it with life sciences. Everybody has the same goal, which is to save lives or to increase quality of life of patients. But both of these groups, the hospital systems around the world and the life science companies around the world, they're not connected, right? 00;15;06;10 - 00;15;40;22 They want to be connected. They want to intersect, but they're working in silos, trying to influence each other when they both have the same goals, which is to save lives or help people. And now with Oracle Health and Oracle Life Sciences being under not only the same umbrella of Oracle, but under the same leadership in terms of team of firms, we're able to break down the silos so that we're able to share the appropriate data and information in an open equal ecosystem in bi directional way. 00;15;41;11 - 00;16;09;04 And while these two groups are deeply intertwined, yet this distinct, if you will, there are innovations there that we're looking at that will help everybody that some of the migrations celebrate recruitment, sharing of data, point of care decisions, things of that nature. So it's about turning data into information, that information into insights with some kind of open, intelligent, cloud based platform. 00;16;09;27 - 00;16;39;24 There is the problem, though, of drowning in data, but starving for insight that's applicable to so many businesses across so many industries. How would the ecosystem that you just described keep life sciences customers from drowning in data that is never used for practical effect? They're absolutely drowning in data. There are more data sources existing secondary data sources in the industry and across the world today. 00;16;40;05 - 00;17;12;02 The majority of these like probably 98% of them are not unified, they're not connected, and interoperability is lacking. Credit card companies figured it out a long time ago when healthcare has and we're starting to get there. Training unified platform of data Health data intelligence platform is what we call it in Oracle, backed by the Oracle cloud infrastructure. So you have data that's very sensitive sovereignty of nations, you're using it. 00;17;13;04 - 00;17;58;11 And of course OCI, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure affords the opportunity for security and speed and all these other benefits. So the more of tokenization we could do to connect the charged with other h.r. Claims with patient reported outcomes survey. The more we can do that in standardized ways with the right governance will help our clients sort through this sea of information so that we can and will help them, of course, you know, focus on what's important, you know, and use A.I. to define the trends in predictive analysis, what predicts better or worse outcomes. 00;17;59;01 - 00;18;21;22 So it's going to take time. We're getting there. We're already making a lot of progress, but I think that's now how we're going to help our clients get there. Well, I did ask about the obstacles of changing overall mindsets, but what are the remaining obstacles to actually building and implementing this eco system that you're talking about? Are there remaining tech obstacles? 00;18;21;22 - 00;18;50;01 Are there privacy issues? I mean, what's what's there that's making this a tough job? Not only we drowning in data, we're drowning in obstacles like that. So certainly you know, that's an obstacle of legalities around the world. Cultural changes and mindsets. Like we mentioned, there's governance. Who owns the data? We get data right to the data technology. Then we go back to that for a second. 00;18;50;11 - 00;19;13;28 You know, how do we connect from one system to the other? I do believe there's still 300 EHR systems out there. The interoperability, governance image. I mean, we're just not sure about. Also, we got to kick them off one at a time. And you know what we're doing at Oracle and Oracle Life Sciences is we're partnering with a lot of different organizing that's out there. 00;19;14;06 - 00;19;50;17 You might have seen our partnerships with the video code here. Johnson Labs, from algorithms, Perspectives. We're partnering with a lot of other organizations to help chip away at these obstacles and get to this ecosystem that we're talking about, where everybody wants. Yeah, you know, when you when you list those obstacles, one thing that's not there is resistance by patients, because I think most of us, you know, it's kind of a joke amongst everybody how every time you go to the doctor, you fill out the same forms again and again and again and again. 00;19;50;27 - 00;20;14;15 Clearly, there's not any kind of centralized clearinghouse for data on me as a patient. And I think most of the public kind of What's that? What's your view on meeting patient expectations where that's concerned? You know, isn't that the most important thing right of the whole conversation is putting the patient at the center of meeting their expectations. Okay. 00;20;14;15 - 00;20;41;03 There are a couple of countries where this is already occurring with the patients. The is all in one place. The patient just pulls up their app and they go and it doesn't matter which doctor or hospital you're walking into or what country they're visiting when they're traveling, they have their medical records in their pocket. One of the articles of issues is around privacy, and you might have mentioned this. 00;20;41;16 - 00;21;12;16 So in the US we have hip in Europe yard and this is trying to protect the patient for the right reasons. But we have to and we have to work within these systems to make sure we're able to operate together for the patients. There's nothing more annoying walking at your doctor's office and filling out the same or complaint or consent form or insurance form or whatever it is, you know, and it's certainly something that we need to do. 00;21;13;04 - 00;21;46;07 I think from a cohort perspective, the older populations and I'm not sure where that likes it's at 40 or 50 or 60, I think they're a little bit more protective and reticent about their privacy and their information. Whereas I see the younger generations, they're like, it makes sense to share it all the time. I wanted out less concerned about privacy, and maybe it's because of how they've grown up with the apps, social media, you know, everything's out there, you know? 00;21;46;08 - 00;22;09;17 So I think the trend is here and the tide is turning. You know, we have to find ways to continue to meet the patients and people where they are. Well, I'm sticking with that patient theme. There's how patients are involved or not in research. And we are hearing more about patient centered outcomes in research. It's another kind of mind shift that needs to happen. 00;22;09;17 - 00;22;35;04 How are we moving toward that where we're listening to the patient more and involving them more in clinical research than we used to? And that's that's the next great question. You threw that statistic out there that what, there's like 30% participation? I mean, there's clearly an issue. Yeah, Yeah, for sure. So patient reporting outcomes are typically subjective nature, right? 00;22;35;04 - 00;23;06;29 So by developing different instruments and scales that derive or predict something in might predict undiagnosed insomnia or anxiety, depression might predict of control of asthma, things of that nature. But there's typically surveys that have been validated through different types of behavioral science, a cognitive interviewing techniques, things of that nature, and then putting them out there. Right. And there's pros and there's observables, which are caregivers, right? 00;23;06;29 - 00;23;33;29 So someone caring for an adult relative, they're scales like that around caregiver burden, these sorts of things. And I'll tell you that the FDA has made a concerted effort to focus on patient focused drug development, and they've put these guidelines out there in terms of what they expect as websites companies are going through their clinical trial or clinical development programs. 00;23;34;00 - 00;24;01;17 Right. So I think that was a really great step to say not only open to this, we want it, we expect it. Right. So we've seen some of that, too. Now get your question. How do you do it right. Well, you can go with it. You charge it claims and look at information about the patient. But you also need to go directly to the patient and get their voice so you can do qualitative types of exercises. 00;24;02;04 - 00;24;22;21 For us at Oracle, I think this live of voices two trials where we go out to cohorts of patients who are eligible and we run through issue friendly terms the inclusion exclusion criteria. What do you think? Would you participate or not? What do we need to change here? And there's a whole bunch of other things to expose them to. 00;24;23;04 - 00;24;46;07 And then they tell us just no way, and this is impacting them. Phone calls of various clinical trials that our clients are working on, and they're taking it back to the EMA, the FDA, and say, here's the patient's voice and this is why we're making the decisions so that we're representing what these patients want in our trials. And often it's different. 00;24;46;23 - 00;25;13;08 So that that's one way We're also seeing more decentralized clinical trials. So over the past four years, with all the challenges of leaving one out and going to a site DCT decentralize, some trials have really accelerated in terms of the volume of trials. So so no longer just a patient have to drive an hour or 4 hours or however far to a site. 00;25;13;21 - 00;25;41;10 Now you bring the trial to them. You bring the phlebotomists to their house, you send them the wearable technologies or whatever it is they might need. So you're meeting the patients where they are so that you could increase participation and be more efficient, more productive, and really get it done in a better way. And the last thing I might mention is some natural history of disease registries. 00;25;41;21 - 00;26;07;25 These are registries that occur usually before the product goes into phase two or phase three clinical trial. And this is where you really start to understand what is the natural history of the disease. Most important, rare diseases where it could take years and years to get a count out in development compounded through or me to diagnose the patients. 00;26;08;04 - 00;26;33;01 And it takes too long to do that. So understanding the natural history of disease is critical. Right now we're running a global registry called Guardian, which is in Gauci Disease type two and Type three, and this registry is the Guardian Registry Registries one. We're collecting patient and caregiver information. We're actually developing a new approach and a new ops or so. 00;26;33;01 - 00;27;04;27 We'll have the patients voice. There are no products indicated for type two or Type three. So all the information is being fed back to the clients who have compounds in development for consideration in their clinical trials. And we're working with the International Gaucher Alliance, which is the global patient advocacy group on this registry. So it's a great partnership and it's getting that patient's voice, you know, where it needs to be, which is in the hands of of the compound development. 00;27;04;27 - 00;27;29;14 You mentioned A.I., you touched on that a little bit at AEI has certainly become part of the conversation, thinking about how it is or has the potential to impact therapeutic research and development. What, in your view, is and isn't overhyped about A.I. and the different stages of research and getting drugs to market so much? I make a lot of a lot of hype. 00;27;29;20 - 00;28;10;01 But also there's there's a lot of there's a lot of sizzle and there's a lot of sauce, right this. So you have to look for it and find it. So reading articles about organizations like Genentech and Janssen who are doing what's called Lab in the Loop, right. And a lot of a lot of life science, pharma companies and biotechs are doing this now where they're doing a and they're crossing their existing and other contacts with biological databases to uncover where might there be a match where some combination of a compound or multiple compounds could actually influence some disease? 00;28;10;01 - 00;28;47;05 Right. And then they tested they put it back in. So that's one area where we're seeing a lot of activity with with a for sure, critical trial designs, just looking at feasibility and protocol optimization and to understand where are the patients, how we are and how they're helping with patient recruitment. Where is indentify sites identifying the patients and incorporating dashboards back at the sites to help doctors identify and quickly recruit those eligible patients, or at least to have the conversations to see if they're interested. 00;28;47;14 - 00;29;28;22 Understand diversity of disease using various databases that have social determinants of health to make sure that we're diverse. Once the FDA is draft guidances, which which looked at everything from social determinants and ethnicity to co-morbidities, other demographics, transplantation, patients, etc., etc., etc. real world evidence teams are using it for their literature reviews. Unfortunately, sometimes they come across hallucinations or some false references, you know, show up and therefore you're always going to need this human collaboration to make sure your data is reliable. 00;29;29;03 - 00;29;55;07 And I'd say the last thing my head is pharmacovigilance, where we can go into existing databases, e charts, claims, both structured or unstructured notes, I should say, you know, and pull out information to identify patients who are having issues and report it in some sort of rapid or real time reporting and not wait. So out a major issue? 00;29;55;19 - 00;30;18;15 Well, since the listeners have been interested enough to still be listening, let's reward them by diving deeper into some of those specific technologies for clinical trials. What is Oracle's role in helping with randomization and trial supply management, which I think is also known as interact of response technology? Again, the work being done to that to get to therapeutic breakthroughs faster. 00;30;18;27 - 00;31;04;00 Yeah. Or TSM randomization, trial or supply management and ERP. It used to be called priority and now it's our TSM. This is an area where we've been playing for a long time. Continue to look at our tools for our clients so that they're able to do things that are quicker, faster, more efficiently. And certainly we've invested in a number of new people around the organization in our data product team, which is made up of some phenomenal engineers, you know, and they're investing we're investing significantly in our technologies to bring it to the next level and clients are responding appropriately, which is which is great. 00;31;04;03 - 00;31;30;08 And it's in a scenario where it's going to help clinical trials more quickly and more efficiently. So amazing things are happening. But, you know, I'm never satisfied. So I'm always curious about what the future could hold. I mean, we already touched on A.I., but what trends and technologies are you seeing out on the horizon that are most likely to bring us the kind of health care revolution that we think is possible? 00;31;31;11 - 00;31;55;06 Well, we've talked about some of them, this change in thinking culture for sure. Some of the policy and privacy types of things that we need to to get through. But this is what's not only on the horizon, but is here, right? It's here right now. I'm excited about the things that we're doing with Oracle Life Sciences to get there faster. 00;31;55;18 - 00;32;30;27 You're combining the data, our medical intelligence for our clients, just seeing it all in one place so that our customers are able to leverage it in a way, giving back to a future for physicians to close that gap between clinical research and clinical care. I think that's what I'm most excited about, I suppose. Oracle recently, very recently announced Oracle Health Data Intelligence, which is being called an open intelligence ecosystem or innovation. 00;32;31;09 - 00;32;57;21 Talk about what is that and how that helps life sciences. And researchers love to do so. So first of all, the Oracle Health Data Intelligence platform, it's open. It's open to anyone, meaning that anybody could tap into it, regardless of what industry, what part of the health care industry or working life sciences, whichever system, electronic health record system you're you're using. 00;32;58;06 - 00;33;32;24 So it's really flexible from that perspective that anybody can tap into it. And the data is research ready, meaning it's usable, right? We're form forming it, we're standardizing, and we're harmonizing it in a way that you can go and do the research that you need to do and get the insights and generate the evidence that you need. And this will help in such a tremendous way with the challenges that I mentioned earlier, breaking down silos, connecting disparate data sources, being structured and data that's now usable. 00;33;32;24 - 00;33;59;14 Right? That is that is not usable currently and it's in many formats. So customers will be able to or anyone really can tap into usable data sets from thousands of sources. So that's the other thing anyone can participate, contribute data. We're going to pull in data from a number of different places and again, turn that data into information and that information into insights and that insight those insights into evidence. 00;33;59;26 - 00;34;23;25 So and this will include longitudinal health data, real world data. I didn't define real world data, so real world data is basically any data that is not clinical trial data. It's in the real world, right? So you see that the care that's occurring within the physician's office or hospital that's not part of a clinical trial is considered real world data. 00;34;23;25 - 00;34;48;01 So that's longitudinal health data, electronic health records, patient registries, whether it's natural history or safety, product registries, all that is considered real world data. And all of that will be part of the health data intelligence platform. And this is an API driven ecosystem, which means anyone could access it. As I mentioned before, whether you use an Oracle clinical application or not. 00;34;48;27 - 00;35;16;18 And you can rest assured knowing it's running securely and safely on the Oracle Cloud infrastructure and as you know, OCI Oracle cloud infrastructure, not only is it safe and secure, but it's a military grade infrastructure and it's being used by the Department of Defense. So you could trust it is reliable, scalable, and it's getting the job done. And the health data intelligence platform, as you know, we have it, we're building it, improving. 00;35;16;18 - 00;35;36;17 This is really a big part of our future here in Oracle Life Sciences at Oracle and quite frankly, in the broader industry. Well, great. You know, I got my answers. Thanks for being our guest today, Michael. We'll be watching those, watching for those shifting mindsets and the changes coming to life sciences. Certainly, Oracle seems to be leading the way in that area. 00;35;36;28 - 00;35;53;25 If our listeners want to learn more, though, about what Oracle's initiatives are or if they want to get in touch with you, is there a way for them to do that? You know, first, my thanks for having me on. I really enjoyed the conversation and pretty good and a couple tough questions in there. So thank you for that to join it. 00;35;54;04 - 00;36;20;28 Everyone is welcome to go to my page and connect with me. I try to post relevant things on occasion. So Michael from set of enforcing the Oracle dot com and find the Oracle Health Sub page of the Oracle Life Sciences of the Explosive Alexa Science Stage Armageddon Sounds good. That got it. Thanks again, Michael. And to our listeners, we don't want you to miss any episodes of research and action. 00;36;20;28 - 00;36;49;01 So please subscribe to the show. And if you want to learn more about how Oracle can accelerate your own life sciences research, you can just go to Oracle dot com slash life dash sciences and we'll see you next time.