convergence: semiconductor, pharmaceutical and medical...
TRANSCRIPT
Convergence: Semiconductor, Pharmaceutical and Medical Device
Industries
Brian Toohey April 4, 2013
Aging populations
• In ten years (2019), 32% more people in the US will be over 65 years than today. By 2025 1.2 billion people will be over 50 years old, twice as many as in 2006.
Sources: World Health Organization (WHO), National Health Expenditure Report 2009, Databeans, Frost &
Sullivan, Economic Times
Remote and emerging markets
• China healthcare expenditure increased from 3.7% of GDP in 1995 to 5.6% in 2007
• India government proposed in 2008 to increase public expenditure on health care from 1% to 3% of GDP
Personal healthcare • 33% of medical semiconductor revenue in 2008
went into consumer medical devices
Rising healthcare costs • U.S. healthcare spending more than 18% of GDP, Europe not far behind
• Costs expected to grow from $2.5 trillion in 2009 to $4.5 trillion in 2019
Strong global trends in Healthcare
Semiconductors in Healthcare Revolution
1980s 1990s 2000 and beyond
Computing transformed
Communications transformed
Healthcare transformed
Computing revolution
Communications revolution
Healthcare revolution
Source: TI and SIA, Congressional Briefing: Enabling the Healthcare Revolution: The Role of Semiconductors
Medical Apps Boost Semiconductor Market
Worldwide medical semiconductor shipment forecast
Source: Databeans
100% monitoring in hospital settings
Images courtesy of Sotera wireless
Source: TI and SIA, Congressional Briefing: Enabling the Healthcare Revolution: The Role of Semiconductors
Bringing ultrasound to the Point-of-Care
Tsunami
Military Mt. Everest
Images courtesy of Sonosite
Source: TI and SIA, Congressional Briefing: Enabling the Healthcare Revolution: The Role of Semiconductors
Weight scale
Blood pressure monitor
Smart bandage
Vital Signs Monitoring
Health & Chronic Disease Management
Connected health, Health portfolio
Clinical Patient Monitoring
GSM/GPRS
Bluetooth®/
Bluetooth
Low-Energy (BLE)
Zigbee/
802.15.4
sub-1GHz ISM band (433 MHz/868 MHz/
915 MHz)
2.4GHz ISM band
(Zigbee/802.15.4/BT/BLE)
BAN
HAN
LAN
WAN
WLAN (802.11a/b/g/n)
ANT/ANT+
Passive non-Battery
Operated RF/RFID
Source: TI and SIA, Congressional Briefing: Enabling the Healthcare Revolution: The Role of Semiconductors
NO BLOOD, NO PAINTM
Images courtesy of Diagtronix
Non-invasive blood glucose monitoring using silicon bio-sensors
Convenience
Source: TI and SIA, Congressional Briefing: Enabling the Healthcare Revolution: The Role of Semiconductors
Electronics inside the human body
Deep brain
stimulation
Cochlear
implant
Gastric
pacemaker Neuro-
stimulator
Implantable
devices
Retinal
implant
Source: TI and SIA, Congressional Briefing: Enabling the Healthcare Revolution: The Role of Semiconductors
4/26/2013 10
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Source: DQ/Micron/WSTS
$/MB DRAM
Now grants ~$300M for
University Research (2005-2011)
Focus on
Manufacturing
Development
NRI Focus on “Beyond CMOS” – Industry/NIST/NSF & States
Industry/DoD Research
Partnership at 38 U.S.
Universities (~$40M
annually)
Physical Limits
of CMOS
SIA founded
10
Industry consortia support for university basic research
behind 10 fold drop in costs every six years
$194 M over next 5
years for leading edge
semiconductor
research
Decades of Industry Collaboration on Research
Semiconductors and Synthetic Biology
Source: Steve Hillenius, SRC Briefing: Exploring Synergy Between Synthetic Biology and Semiconductor Technology
Example: Semiconductor/Biological Circuits
Source: Steve Hillenius, SRC Briefing: Exploring Synergy Between Synthetic Biology and Semiconductor Technology
Future Health Challenges
Source: Images courtesy of Imec
Semiconductors Can Play a Role in the Future of Care
Source: Images courtesy of Imec
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