Bill Davenhall



Sort by : relevance - date
5Vote!

HuffPost on Bill Davenhall's TED MED Presentation

Alana B. Elias Kornfeld was at TED MED which started yesterday in San Diego. She gave ESRI's Health and Human Services Solutions Manager Bill Davenhall high praise for his presentation on the importance of geography in preventing, managing and unders... Read more

5Vote!

Amylin Forms Global Alliance in Obesity Drug Development; TEDMED’s Show Will Go On, Sequenom Sued for Civil Fraud, & More San Diego Biotech News

... of the presentations at TEDMED last week. One of my favorites talks, though, was delivered by Bill Davenhall, who leads the health and human services marketing team at ESRI , the Redlands, CA, giant in geographic information systems. Davenhall talked about the importance of including patients’ “place histories” as part of their medical records and raised an interesting question:...

10Vote!

Alana B. Elias Kornfeld: TED MED 2009: The Missing Piece In Understanding Our Health

... after the show aired). But the most compelling and immediately applicable information came from Bill Davenhall, the global marketing manager for Health & Human Services Solutions, ESRI , the largest geographic information system (GIS) software developer in the world. Davenhall spoke about the missing piece to understanding personal health: the environment. He said the basic...

5Vote!

TED MED Day 1: Robotic Arms are Just the Beginning

... The Huffington Post recapped yesterday’s events as well, particularly the speech by Bill Davenhall (the global marketing manager for Health & Human Services Solutions, ESRI), declaring it the “most compelling and immediately applicable” information of Day 1. Davenhall stressed a health risk factor that often goes unexamined: environment. As HuffPo concisely...

4Vote!

TEDMED 2009 - Day 1

... "ER" and "Law and Order SVU" writer Neal Baer, geographic medicine popularizer Bill Davenhall, and songwriter Jill Sobule. Sekou Andrews kicked off the conference with an energetic, free-flowing poem of sorts about health care, rhyming a mash-up of medical terms and concepts to get the crowd excited for the conference at hand. After him, Craig Venter took the stage...