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The young investigator with an idea has to negotiate many
institutional, federal, and industrial challenges in order to get a
product to market. Nowhere is described the steps in the
development of new drugs, diagnos tics, or devices; the person with
an idea has nowhere to turn for information and details. The young
investigator may understand the elements of basic and clinical
research, but ordinarily has no insight into novel ways of finding
research funding or how to explore to find the funding
opportunities that are available. The young investigator has little
knowledge of the mecha nisms to bring an idea through the
developmental phases to the market. There are other players in this
complex endeavor with whom he or she has no contact, including
those from industry, the Food and Drug Administration, and the
legal community. Exposure to the philosophy of product develop ment
and to procedural information would be useful to the scientific com
munity, as would contact with those who have successfully taken an
idea to a finished product. A first attempt to do this was the
symposium on Idea to Product: The Process, sponsored by Serono
Symposia USA and held No vember 17 to 20, 1994, in Washington, D.C.
This book comprises the pro ceedings of that meeting. The editors
are indebted to the many contributors to this volume, and we are
especially grateful to Serono Symposia USA and to Leslie Nies and
her staff for their expertise in organizing the symposium."
The young investigator with an idea has to negotiate many
institutional, federal, and industrial challenges in order to get a
product to market. Nowhere is described the steps in the
development of new drugs, diagnos tics, or devices; the person with
an idea has nowhere to turn for information and details. The young
investigator may understand the elements of basic and clinical
research, but ordinarily has no insight into novel ways of finding
research funding or how to explore to find the funding
opportunities that are available. The young investigator has little
knowledge of the mecha nisms to bring an idea through the
developmental phases to the market. There are other players in this
complex endeavor with whom he or she has no contact, including
those from industry, the Food and Drug Administration, and the
legal community. Exposure to the philosophy of product develop ment
and to procedural information would be useful to the scientific com
munity, as would contact with those who have successfully taken an
idea to a finished product. A first attempt to do this was the
symposium on Idea to Product: The Process, sponsored by Serono
Symposia USA and held No vember 17 to 20, 1994, in Washington, D.C.
This book comprises the pro ceedings of that meeting. The editors
are indebted to the many contributors to this volume, and we are
especially grateful to Serono Symposia USA and to Leslie Nies and
her staff for their expertise in organizing the symposium.
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