Senior Director, FasterCures, Milken Institute Health
Kristin Schneeman is a senior director on the FasterCures team at Milken Institute Health. With the Milken Institute since 2005, her primary responsibility is FasterCures' innovation portfolio of projects and activities.
COVID-19 has focused the public’s attention on the racial and ethnic disparities in health outcomes, unequal access to health care, and some communities’ lack of trust and participation in medical research. These problems have been decades, if not centuries, in the making, and they cannot be quickly or easily solved. However, attention is a critical prerequisite to action, and FasterCures believes that we must seize this moment to make real change, particularly to transform the way that local institutions conduct clinical research so that it is representative of the diverse communities comprising the American population.
Examples certainly exist of clinical research networks that have succeeded in increasing the engagement and participation of underserved communities. Many local health-care institutions, however, lack the resources and infrastructure to engage in research, resulting in less robust trials for sponsors, lower access to innovation, and poorer outcomes across communities. COVID-19 revealed in stark terms the price to be paid for the lack of a comprehensive community-based research system that can generate evidence to answer a broad range of critical research questions, whether in the context of sponsor-driven product development trials, comparative effectiveness studies, or a fast-moving public health emergency (PHE).
Ideally, such a nationwide system would find participants in all the places they live and access their care, not just the large academic medical centers where much clinical research is currently conducted. Yet, who should be responsible for creating and maintaining such a system? What steps can the federal government take to build capacity at the local level—to create an “ecosystem of excellence” rather than “islands of pilots”? Building on findings from FasterCures’ 'Lessons Learned from COVID-19: Are There Silver Linings for Biomedical Innovation?' report and a virtual leadership roundtable held in September 2021, this issue brief:
Highlights best practices from organizations that are leading the way in community-based clinical research;
Identifies common infrastructure gaps that exist at the community level and how we can build engaged, interoperable health systems in research moving forward; and
Pinpoints national policies and resources needed to strengthen critical infrastructure at the community level to empower local institutions to participate in clinical research.
Clinical trial networks, as evidenced during the COVID-19 pandemic, really are “national critical infrastructure.” The pandemic revealed prominent gaps and stark differences in health outcomes across various populations. A community-based...
While the response to the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed many of the fault lines in the biomedical innovation ecosystem that have slowed progress for decades, we have also shown ourselves capable of innovating in ways we perhaps did not...
FasterCures wants to ensure that the lessons of the COVID-19 crisis are not lost once the current urgency subsides — not only for combating future infectious diseases, but for conducting every other aspect of biomedical innovation...
Lauren K. Roth Associate Commissioner for Policy Food and Drug Administration 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm. 1061 Rockville, MD 20852 Dear Ms. Roth, FasterCures is pleased to respond to the Request for Comments on the FDA Draft Guidance for the...
The 26th annual Milken Institute Global Conference convened the best minds in the world to tackle its most urgent challenges and realize its most exciting opportunities. Throughout the four-day event, our health teams curated nearly three...
The United States—as of June 2020—has more reported cases of COVID-19 than any other country in the world, despite having many of the same resources as other countries that curbed the pandemic more successfully. COVID-19 has highlighted the...
WASHINGTON, March 4, 2020 – Esther Krofah, a respected leader in biomedical research, development, and public policy, has been named executive director of FasterCures, the Milken Institute center devoted to accelerating access to life...
Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer
Jeff Valliere oversees the development of fully integrated, strategic initiatives that support the mission, vision, and values of the Milken Institute.
The Milken Institute’s FasterCures works to build an effective, efficient system driven by a clear vision: patient needs above all else. We are honored to welcome Alex Azar, the 24th US secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), to the...
In This Newsletter Program Updates Events and Convenings Recap Recent Publications Policy Updates FasterCures in the Community Upcoming Events Program Updates FasterCures Awarded FDA Funding to Advance Patient Engagement in Medtech...
Esther Krofah is the executive vice president of Milken Institute Health, leading FasterCures, Public Health, the Future of Aging, and Feeding Change. She has extensive experience managing efforts to unite diverse stakeholders to solve critical issues and achieve shared goals that improve patients’ lives.