Fortune July 8, 2020
Maria Aspan

The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the extent to which technology and medicine often move at vastly different speeds, sometimes complicating contact tracing, vaccine development, and telehealth.

But on Wednesday, health leaders at Apple and Stanford University School of Medicine celebrated some of the ways in which they have learned to work together productively—and to speed up the academic medical process without losing its scientific rigor.

“A really important part of the work we do is really thinking about: What is the science that we’re bringing to bear, and is it grounded in evidence? And then how do we take that and make it usable?,” said Dr. Sumbul Desai, Apple’s vice president of health, during a panel discussion at...

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