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Yale spins off five biotech firms Until a decade ago, Yale's participation in technology transfer, the movement of basic science advances into the commercial marketplace, was negligible. That has changed dramatically (Yale Medicine, Fall 1997), and the change delights budget makers, among others. Two years ago, Yale's annual income from royalties and licenses for University-developed projects had grown to $3 million. Yale expects those earnings to soar phenomenally, reaching $38 million for the fiscal year that ended June 30 and placing it among a handful of the universities leading in annual royalty and licensing income. More than three-quarters of the income has come from royalties from the AIDS medication Zerit, developed at Yale. A Yale-developed Lyme disease vaccine is expected to boost royalty income further in the coming years. There's more good news. The Office of Cooperative Research has announced the formation of five new biotechnology companies based on spin-off technologies from School of Medicine research. Each of the new ventures plans to establish research and development facilities in the New Haven area, creating an anticipated 70 or more new jobs in their first year of operations. Yale is taking a more active role in forming new ventures in an effort to make sure the New Haven area reaps economic benefits from the University's research. says Gregory E. Gardiner, Ph.D., director of the Office of Cooperative Research. Aside from creating new jobs, the five companies are developing drugs and diagnostic techniques that have the potential to significantly benefit human health throughout the world. The five new companies formed in partnership with Yale are: Formation of the new companies exceeds the University's goals of spinning off three to four biotech companies each year, according to Jon Soderstrom, Ph.D., associate director of the Office of Cooperative Research. According to results of a poll released in April, biomedical research and biotechnology industry have the strong support of the vast majority of Connecticut residents. Most would even be willing to pay a surcharge on various health services or increased taxes if the money went to biomedical research. The survey was commissioned by the national biomedical research-advocacy organization Research! America and released by Connecticut United for Research Excellence, Inc. (CURE), coalition supporting biomedical research and education. Among its findings, the poll indicated that 80 percent of the respondents said they are more likely to think a hospital is good if they know it is engaged in research and training of medical students and residents. |
Also in Scope: A plan for new space | Five new biotech ventures | Earlier cancer diagnoses | Lyme disease anxiety | Public health in China | How a brain tumor travels | Preventing stroke | New Haven Health online | An Everest expedition | Tobacco Wars | ADHD overdiagnosed? | Battling confusion | Closer town-gown ties | Art and medicine | Making sense of school violence | Human powered wings | Cardiology network forms | Canavan disease | Autobody distress | Dr. Doe verdict appealed | A "natural" tan | Confronting violence | Focus on fitness < back | top of page | next > Originally published in Yale Medicine, Summer 1998. Copyright © 1998 Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. |
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