Pam Diamond – The Sound of Medicine

Here she explains all about the challenges and triumphs that saw her reach her position of chief medical officer at Curavit including her links to the Sound of Music’s von Trapp family.  

Could you give us an overview of your work?

I received my medical degree from the University of Rochester School of Medicine in 1985 and completed my General Surgery internship at the University’s Strong Memorial Hospital one year later. I went on to complete my residency at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary (MEEI) in 1990, graduating with all male residents, and then became a board-certified otolaryngologist/ head and neck surgeon. I remained affiliated with these organizations for over 30 years. I had the pleasure of caring for thousands of patients and teaching many medical students and residents while serving on the MEEI Board of Surgeons, MEEI Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee, and the Atrius Health Site Council. 

After nearly three decades of practicing medicine and observing the problems in clinical research, I pivoted sharply. I wanted to make a broader impact on healthcare by contributing to research and working to modernize clinical trials. Joel Morse, Dave Hanaman, and I co-founded Curavit Clinical Research in October 2019 when – like the rest of the world – we had zero premonition about the pandemic yet to come that would cause clinical trial activity to grind to a halt. Our timing was uncanny.

Curavit is a virtual clinical research organization (VCRO) that helped fill a huge hole during the early days of COVID by enabling life-changing clinical trials to continue remotely using digital technologies. Today, decentralized clinical trials (DCTs) continue and are moving from edge case to main case and scaling across the enterprise.

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