14 research outputs found
Detection of Glu-Glu-Tagged Proteins in Mammalian Cell Culture Media by Dot Immunoblotting
A dot immunoblotting technique has been developed to estimate the relative expression levels of tagged recombinant human proteins in mammalian cell culture media. Variations in sample denaturation, blocking agents and membrane composition and treatment were used to optimize the signal-to-noise ratio of the defined procedure. The method is rapid, with sensitivity extending to the low nanomolar range for a number of recombinant proteins. This technique should have general utility for antibodybased measurements of other tagged and non-tagged proteins in cell culture media or in biological fluids
A Comparison of the Costs Associated with the Administration of Select High-cost Infused Medications in Three Sites of Care for a State Medicaid Population
This poster evaluates the financial impact of high-cost infused medications across three site of care programs. Site of care programs help payers save money on specialty drug spend by shifting utilization on high costs infused medications to less costly sites of administration. The objective of this project was to evaluate the costs associated with the administration of select high-cost infused medications in site of care programs in Massachusetts Medicaid populations. Research was done through retrospective analysis that included pharmacy and medical claims data for select high cost infused medications between April 1, 2017 - September 20, 2017.
This presentation was given at the 2018 Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy Annual Meeting and received the AMCP Foundation Best Poster Award in the Resident and Fellows category
The Political Economy of Intellectual Property Treaties
Intellectual property treaties have two main types of provisions: national treatment of foreign inventors, and harmonization of protections. I characterize the circumstances in which countries would want to treat foreign inventors the same as national inventors. I then argue that national treatment of foreign inventors leads to stronger intellectual property protection than is optimal, and that this effect is exacerbated when protections must be harmonized. However levels of public and private R&D spending will be lower than if each country took account of the uncompensated externalities that its R&D spending confers on other countries. The stronger protection engendered by attempts at harmonization are a partial remedy
Consumer Segments Based on Attitudes Toward Luxury: Empirical Evidence from Twenty Countries
This article proposes an international segmentation of consumers based on their attitudes toward luxury. We perform a two-stage empirical study with a data set that combines samples from 20 countries. We provide a substantive interpretation of the results to show that three attitude segments dominate in a Western cultural context. We discuss several directions for future research based on the findings. Copyright Springer Science + Business Media, Inc. 2005luxuries, international marketing research, latent-class segmentation, mixture models,