Difference between revisions of "Non-profit versus For-profit Medical Institutions and the Commercialization of Invention"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|Has author=Catherine Kirby, Ed Egan, | |Has author=Catherine Kirby, Ed Egan, | ||
|Has paper status=Idea | |Has paper status=Idea | ||
+ | |Blah= | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 11:12, 31 March 2017
Academic Paper | |
---|---|
Title | Understanding the Relationship between Startups and Medical Centers |
Author | Catherine Kirby, Ed Egan |
Status | Idea |
© edegan.com, 2016 |
Data
- Core Patent Data
- Patent Assignment Data
- VentureXpert
- Our data on Medical Centers
- Grant Data
- Clinical Trial Data
Measures of the relationship
- Patents can (and frequently do) have more than one assignee at a time. Assignment also changes as patents are sold or exclusively licensed (as well as for other reason). Patents with joint assignment or sequential assignment are relevant.
- Clinical trials have one or more sponsors and one or more locations. Clinical trials jointly sponsored by a startup and a medical center facility or sponsored by a startup and then located at a medical center facility are relevant.
- NIH grants have one or more recipients as well as associated patents and trials
Status
At present Catherine is matching patents, grants, and clinical trials to Medical Centers. She's going to write this up as a separate report for the Medical Centers and Grants project.