Medical Communications Consulting

Peloton Advantage, a leading medical communications company, is looking to expand their consultant panel. Several major therapeutic areas have been identified, including but not limited to Cardiovascular Disease, Central Nervous System Disorders, Oncology, Infectious Disease, Pulmonary Diseases, and Dermatology.
 
Peloton Advantage is a medical communications company founded in 2005 and specializing in publication planning and content development. The company is committed to providing superior quality strategic publication planning, content development, and project management support, allowing their pharmaceutical and biotechnology clients to positively impact the healthcare market and patient treatment.
 
Peloton Advantage has extensive experience in strategically planning and implementing standard publication plan components such as manuscripts, abstracts, posters, journal supplements, and slide presentations, as well as key events integral to the plan, including communication planning sessions, advisory board meetings, and round table discussions. Their team weaves insight gained from years of publications-specific experience into innovative approaches to competitive analyses, literature and data gap analyses, and several interactive products.
 
For more information about Peloton Advantage, please visit their website.

2 Responses to “Medical Communications Consulting”

  1. Diane Moseberry, MD Says:

    I am not entirely clear what is meant by consultants in the listed thereuptic subspecialty areas. Are you requesting persons with fellowships in those subspecialities? Are you looking for academic affiliation? Also, what kind of availiability is necessary, and what does being a consultant entail?

  2. PRN Says:

    The need for consultants in the medical communications field is often sporadic, and frequently occurs with little notice. As a result, having a panel of potential consultants to fill these needs is beneficial. The specific expertise requirement varies but generally requires specialty focus in the given therapeutic area, through fellowship training and/or clinical practice experience. In some cases the input of primary care physicians in these “specialty” areas is helpful as well. The time commitment may be as little as consulting on a couple of teleconferences to answer questions about treatment options and preferences or as large as an ongoing part-time workload to provide strategic input of write/review materials.

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