News — Today in Nature Biotechnology, 40+ world leaders across science and medicine published an article entitled "" that outlines the need for a modern-day “Apollo Program” to “control biological time” for organs and tissues.
This is identified as one of the key challenges facing biomedicine today affecting millions of people each year worldwide by constraining the ability to treat patients for heart disease, cancer, diabetes, liver failure, and other leading causes of death. Implications for global health, the success of scientific research and drug discovery, healthcare expenditures, and national defense are profound.
is the Director of Bioheat and Mass Transfer Lab at the University of Minnesota where he also is the Distinguished McKnight University Professor and Carl and Janet Kuhrmeyer Chair in Mechanical Engineering. Bischof is one of the only 20 Fellows of the International Society for Cryobiology and is a Founding Scientific Advisors to the . He recently published on a key advance in .
is lead author on the calling for the "Apollo Program." He is the cofounder and chairman of each of the Organ Preservation Alliance, Sylvatica Biotech Inc (100% organ banking R&D focused company) and Ossium Health Inc (a stem cell and tissue bank). He is trained at Harvard Business School where he has named a Baker Scholar. Giwa was an enabler of the first global Organ Banking Summit at Stanford, the the White House Roundtable on Organ Banking and is the author of the peer-reviewed paper .
To arrange an interview with Bischof and/or Giwa or take video in environments such as a during scientific cryo experiments, organ procurement (e.g. helicopter transport of organs) and/or a transplantation in an O.R., please contact Giwa at [email protected] or Rhonda Zurn at [email protected].
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