"On October 19, thousands of infectious-disease professionals - including doctors, researchers, and medical students - will fill the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta for Infectious Disease Week. The annual conference, which runs through October 22, comes at a challenging time for the medical and scientific community: Vaccine hesitancy continues to spread, grant funding dwindles, and the government publicizes false claims about Tylenol's risks. To understand how infectious-disease leaders in research and clinical care are working through this era, Business Insider will be on the ground for talks about public health strategy, healthcare innovation, and the future of careers in the field."
"This year's ID Week will center on themes like artificial intelligence in healthcare and biopreparedness for infectious disease outbreaks, Dr. Yohei Doi, an ID Week chair representing the Infectious Disease Society of America, told Business Insider. "We have presenters who are experts in public health, and we're looking forward to hearing their insights. I think public health has always been a theme, but it will be heavily featured this year," Doi said ahead of the conference."
Infectious Disease Week convenes thousands of clinicians, researchers, and trainees in Atlanta from October 19–22 to address contemporary challenges in infectious disease. Presentations will emphasize artificial intelligence applications in healthcare and biopreparedness for outbreaks. Attendees will examine public health strategy, healthcare innovation, and career development amid rising vaccine hesitancy, shrinking grant funding, and misinformation about medication risks. The meeting brings together multiple professional societies spanning adult and pediatric infectious diseases, epidemiology, HIV medicine, and pharmacy. Sessions will present expert perspectives on outbreak readiness, clinical advances, and strategies to bolster public trust and scientific support.
Read at Business Insider
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