Conference Day 1: Thursday, 13 July 2023

Registration | Welcome Coffee & Tea

Time: 8.00am

Venue: Level 4 & 5 

Welcome Address

Time: 9.00am

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

Dr Clive TAN, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

Welcome Address

Time: 9.05am

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

Prof TEO Yik Ying, Dean, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore

Opening Address

Time: 9.10am

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

Mr ONG Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Opening plenary: Digital Health for Population Health

Time: 9.20am

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

Speakers:

  • Dr Beverly HO, Assistant Secretary of Health, Public Health Services Team, Department of Health, Philippines
 
  • Mr James PARK, Fitbit Vice President and General Manager, Google

Moderator:

  • Assoc Prof Jeremy LIM, Director, Leadership Institute for Global Health Transformation, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore 

Coffee Break

Time: 10.15am

Venue: Level 2, Marketplace & Level 4, Kampung Square

Plenary: Precision Public Health - Paying for the Roads, the Buses and the Fancy Sports Cars

Time: 10.45am

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

In this session, panellists, and eminent economists from the health and transport sectors will explore how precision public health is funded In different countries.

Data digitally captured and ideally in machine-readable formats is the foundation of precision public health but upfront investment can be significant. Who should pay for the ‘roads’? And through what mechanisms?

Once the ‘roads’ are built, ‘buses’ which serve the public and ‘sports cars’ driven by private gain equal benefit. What funding models enable critical infrastructure to be built and made accessible? Should ‘sports cars’ pay more to use the ‘roads’ so that ‘bus’ users pay less?

Speakers:

  • Prof Rachel LU, Professor, Graduate Institute of Management and Department of Health Care Management, College of Management, Chang Gung University
 
  • Assoc Prof Jeremy LIM, Director, Leadership Institute for Global Health Transformation, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore
 
  • Assoc Prof Walter Edgar THESEIRA , Associate Professor, Economics & Head, Master of Management (Urban Transportation) Programme, Singapore University of Social Sciences

Moderator:

  • Prof TEO Yik Ying, Dean, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore

Lunch Symposium: So Precise sia! Unlocking Facial Clues and more

Time: 12.15pm

Venue: Level 2, Hall 3

The patient suffering from an undiagnosed rare condition faces numerous challenges in the diagnosis and treatment odyssey. Here in Takeda, we are focused on providing solutions and options to optimize the care and unmet needs of the rare disease community. In this session, we showcase innovative groundbreaking technologies and advances in the form of identifying facial clue identification that could point to undiagnosed conditions, and Takeda’s strong access first philosophy with a Singapore example.

Unlocking Facial Clues for Accurate and Timely Diagnosis in Rare Conditions

  • Dr Richard PALMER, Research Associate, Curtin University

Within Plain Sight and Under Our Noses

  • Dr Saumya JAMUAR, Clinical Geneticist, KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital 

TAK-755 Common But Not So Common

  • Ms Winnie ANG, Senior Medical Science Liaison, Takeda Pharmaceuticals (Asia Pacific) 

Moderator:

  • Dr GOH Choo Beng, Head of Medical Affairs, India and South East Asia, Takeda Pharmaceuticals (Asia Pacific)

Breakout Sessions

Time: 1.45pm

Stream 1

Session 1: Investing in Breakthrough Ideas in Precision Public Health & Population Genomics

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

In this session, the panellists will explore the challenges and opportunities associated with funding breakthrough ideas in this precision public health and population genomics, considering factors such as technology development, data privacy, regulatory considerations, and commercialisation prospects. The panellists will also discuss the criteria they use to evaluate the potential of such breakthrough ideas in eventually making the cut.

Speakers: 

  • Mr Andrew TRISTER, Deputy Director, Digital Health and Innovation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Dr Lisa OOI, Vice President (Strategy), Hummingbird Bioscience
  • Dr Robert BALDERAS, Distinguished Fellow and VP, Biological Sciences, BD
  • Dr Kim PNG, Principal, Polaris Partners

Moderator: 

  • Assoc Prof WEE Hwee Lin, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore

Stream 2

Session 2: Clinical Impact at Scale through Precision Public Health 

Venue: Level 2, Hall 1

This session brings together leading data scientists and digital health experts to explore the transformative potential of precision public health and how it can have a large-scale clinical impact through the integration of clinical data, genomics, digital health technologies, and social determinants of health to improve lives. Precision medicine and public health are often thought to be on opposite sides of the spectrum of medicine but with the advent of new technologies, they can be brought together to have a targeted impact at the population level and yet be cost-effective. From early disease detection to targeted interventions for high-risk populations, the speakers present compelling evidence of how precision public health can improve health outcomes and reduce disparities at scale.

Speakers: 

  • Prof Rod JACKSON, Medical Epidemiology & Biostatistics, University of Auckland
  • Prof Rohini MATHUR, Professor and Chair of Health Data Science, Queen Mary University of London
  • Prof Kaja ABBAS, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
  • Mr Daryl ARNOLD, Founder and CEO, ConnectedLife

Moderator: 

  • Dr NG Yih Yng , Director, Digital and Smart Health Office and Deputy Clinical Director, Ng Teng Fong Centre for Health Innovation 

Stream 3

Session 3: Capacity Building in Precision Public Health

Venue: Level 2, Hall 2

Precision public health can only take root when there is human and infrastructure capacity in the system. Each health system’s capacity for digital health, data sharing, precision medicine and other key enablers of precision public health differs. The situation is even more challenging in low and middle-income countries, but high-income countries are also not spared. Our speakers in this session will discuss and explore the issue of capacity building and explore ideas how organisations and people can work differently in this new era in the above-mentioned domains and share their personal experiences.  

Speakers: 

  • Dr Adam CHEE, Chief, Smart Health Leadership Centre, Institute of Systems Science, National University of Singapore; Distinguished Visiting Professor of Population Data Science Research & Innovation Institute, Swansea University Medical School
  • Dr Souliya CHANNAVONG, Preventable Vaccine Diseases and Immunization (VDI) Officer, World Health Organization (WHO) Lao Country Office
  • Assoc Prof LOW Cheng Ooi, Chief Technology Officer, Sheares Healthcare Group

Moderator: 

  • Prof Hsu Li Yang, Vice Dean (Global Health), Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore

Coffee Break

Time: 3.15pm

Venue: Level 2, Marketplace & Level 4, Kampung Square

Breakout Sessions

Time: 3.45pm

Stream 1

Session 4: Accelerate Adoption of Integrated Healthcare Solutions to Improve Health Outcomes and System Efficiency

Venue: Level 4 & 5, Auditorium

Today, more than ever before, we have the ability to deliver personalised care for patients through Integrated Solutions which combines advanced technologies and digital solutions with high-quality therapeutics and diagnostics to drive the adoption of healthcare innovations, provide more holistic patient benefits while optimising healthcare resources. This session will explore how we can progress the adoption of innovative solutions in a real-world setting, and discuss the key enablers.  

Speakers: 

  • Dr Ahmed ELHUSSEINY, APAC Area Head, Roche Pharmaceuticals
  • Prof John LIM, Executive Director, Centre of Regulatory Excellence (CoRE), Duke-NUS
  • Dr Chansaly PHOMMAVONG, Deputy Director of Planning and
    Cooperation Department,
    Ministry of Health Lao PDR
  • Mr Setiaji SETIAJI , Senior Advisor to the Minister for Health Technology, Ministry of Health of the Republic of Indonesia

Moderator: 

  • Dr Clive TAN, Assistant Chief, Group Integrated Care (Population Health), National Healthcare Group

Stream 2

Session 5: Bridging Innovation in Precision Medicine and Regulation for the Greater Good

Venue: Level 2, Hall 1

Over the past decade, there has been strong innovation and support for the developments in precision medicine and precision public health, and several programmes, initiatives and developments have been able to cross the valley of death and move into the scale-up and mainstream stage. Health regulations play an important role and can either enable or restrict the progression of these innovations.  

Speakers: 

  • Dr Raymond CHUA, Deputy Director-General of Health, Health Regulation Group; Assistant Commissioner (Cybersecurity – Healthcare) Ministry of Health, Singapore
  • Dr Yvanka GILLIAM, Vice President of Operations, Asia Pacific, Diaceutics
  • Dr Jesper BONDE, Senior Researcher, Head of Unit, Research group leader, Molecular Pathology Laboratory, Dept. Pathology, AHH-Hvidovre Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital

Moderator: 

  • Assoc Prof TAN Cher Heng, Executive Director, Centre for Healthcare Innovation

Stream 3

Masterclass: Video Vitals: Non-Contact Estimation of Vital Signs for Resource Constrained Environments

Venue: Level 2, Hall 2

The emergence of ubiquitous mobile computing devices and Artificial Intelligence (AI) algorithms is transforming patient care, hereby making it more scalable and accessible. This is of particular importance in resource-constrained environments (RCEs) where access to healthcare technologies or expertise may be limited. The sensing modalities (e.g., camera/gyroscope) of mobile devices are capable of capturing and storing data that can then be used by AI algorithms for healthcare insights. One challenge however is separating signal (i.e., health-related information) from noise (non-health-related information). This challenge is exacerbated by the class imbalance problem. i.e., typically, more instances of someone being in a healthy state, as opposed to a disease state. Our research leverages the data acquired by mobile devices to estimate health signals such as vital signs. The goal of having these models generalise across people and cultures motivates the need for field studies and deployments in RCEs. This has resulted in new collaborations that include researchers in the lab, and field workers in RCEs.  

Speakers: 

  • Prof Conrad TUCKER, Professor, Mechanical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University

Demonstration By: 

  • Mr Ananyananda DASARI, PhD Student, Carnegie Mellon University

End of Conference Day 1

Time: 5.15pm

The programme is updated as of 27 JUNE 2023, and subject to change.

Dr Tarun Weeranmanthri

President of the Public Health Association of Australi
Edward is the founder and CEO of reach52; a tech startup on a mission to connect the 52% of the world that lack access to essential health services.

Hear them speak at:

Welcome Address by Dr Clive Tan, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

  • Opening Address by Mr Ong Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Welcome Address by Dr Clive Tan, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

  • Opening Address by Mr Ong Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Welcome Address by Dr Clive Tan, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

  • Opening Address by Mr Ong Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Mr James Park

Fitbit vice president, co-founder of Fitbit

Bio

James Park is Fitbit vice president and general manager, Google, as well as co-founder of Fitbit. In his role, James leads the team responsible for development of wearables at Google. With a commitment to innovation, James and his team aim to make health more accessible, fun and achievable by offering a range of affordable, cross-platform devices.

James co-founded Fitbit alongside Eric Friedman in 2007 with a vision to make the world healthier, through hardware, software and services that give people a better understanding of their health and wellness. Since its founding, Fitbit has sold millions of devices across 100 countries, pioneering the wearables industry to make fitness tracking a cultural phenomenon and redefining how the world thinks and learns about health and wellness.

Previously, James was director of product development at CNET Networks. He also served as president and co-founder of Wind-Up Labs, Inc., an online photo-sharing company that was acquired by CNET Networks in 2005, and chief technology officer and co-founder of Epesi Technologies, Inc., a business-to-business software company. 

Prof Rohini MATHUR

Professor and Chair of Health Data Science at Queen Mary University of London

Bio

Rohini Mathur is a Professor and Chair of Health Data Science at Queen Mary University of London, specialising in the application of precision medicine approaches in globally diverse datasets to address health inequalities, particularly around cardiometabolic disease. Professor Mathur has active collaborations with colleagues across India, Singapore and Thailand. She was previously Associate Professor at LSHTM, where she completed a postdoctoral fellowship funded by the Wellcome Trust examining ethnic inequalities in the care and outcomes of type 2 diabetes, and was a member of the OpenSAFELY collaborative working on a range of COVID-19 related projects. She completed an undergraduate degree in public health at the University of Waterloo in Canada, followed by an MSc and PhD at LSHTM.

Dr Andrew Trister

Assistant Secretary of the Public Health Services Team of the Department of Health
Edward is the founder and CEO of reach52; a tech startup on a mission to connect the 52% of the world that lack access to essential health services.

Hear them speak at:

Welcome Address by Dr Clive Tan, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

  • Opening Address by Mr Ong Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Welcome Address by Dr Clive Tan, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

  • Opening Address by Mr Ong Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Welcome Address by Dr Clive Tan, Organising Chair, Precision Public Health Asia 2023 Conference

  • Opening Address by Mr Ong Ye Kung, Minister for Health, Singapore

Dr Beverly Ho

Assistant Secretary of the Public Health Services Team of the Department of Health

Bio

Beverly Lorraine Ho is the Assistant Secretary of the Public Health Services Team of the Department of Health. As Assistant Secretary of PHST, she leads the development, implementation, and monitoring of standards, policies, and programs for population- and individual-based health services. She also oversees the Disease Prevention and Control Bureau, Epidemiology Bureau, and Health Promotion Bureau.

Prior to this, she was the Health Promotion Bureau Director, which leads the implementation of policies and programs that promote healthy behaviors and support conducive environments for health and the Director of the Disease Prevention and Control Bureau, which leads the primary care integration of various health programs. She previously served as the Chief of the Research Division of the Health Policy Development and Planning Bureau, where her efforts significantly contributed to the passage of key legislation on sugar-sweetened beverage taxes, tobacco taxes, and universal health care. She has also worked for the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation and the Asian Development Bank.

Bev is a fellow of the Maurice Greenberg World Fellows Program at Yale University, the Equity Initiative, and the Atlantic Institute. She holds an MD from the University of the Philippines and an MPH in Health Policy and Management from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health as a Fulbright Scholar

Prof TAN Chorh Chuan

Chief Health Scientist, Ministry of Health, Singapore Executive Director, MOH Office for Healthcare Transformation

Bio

Professor Tan Chorh Chuan was appointed as the inaugural Chief Health Scientist and concurrently, Executive Director of the new Office for Healthcare Transformation in Singapore’s Ministry of Health since 1 January 2018.

Before joining MOHT Professor Tan served as President of the National University of Singapore (NUS) from 2008 to 2017. Prior to that he also held the positions of NUS Provost, then Senior Deputy President between the years of 2004 and 2008. He was former Dean of the NUS Faculty of Medicine and served as the Director of Medical Services, Ministry of Health, from 2000 to 2004, where he was responsible for leading the public health response to the 2003 SARS epidemic. More recently, he was appointed member of the Expert Committee on COVID-19 Vaccination in 2020, which advises the government on Singapore’s vaccination strategy.

In 2022, Professor Tan was were conferred The Distinguished Service Order. His other awards include the Public Service Star in 2003 for outstanding contributions to overcoming SARS in Singapore; the Public Administration Gold Medal in 2004 for his work as Director of Medical Services in the Ministry of Health; and the Meritorious Service Medal in 2015. He was awarded the National Science and Technology Medal in 2008 and is the first Singaporean to be elected as an international member of the US National Academy of Medicine.

A renal physician, Professor Tan obtained his medical training at NUS, and research training at the Institute of Molecular Medicine, Oxford.