{"id":41239,"date":"2022-10-26T19:54:38","date_gmt":"2022-10-26T19:54:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rightsdirect.com\/?post_type=blog_post&p=41239"},"modified":"2022-10-26T19:54:39","modified_gmt":"2022-10-26T19:54:39","slug":"legal-und-bibliothek","status":"publish","type":"blog_post","link":"https:\/\/www.rightsdirect.com\/de\/blog\/legal-und-bibliothek\/","title":{"rendered":"Kluge Partnerschaften zwischen Teams aus den Bereichen Legal und Bibliothek st\u00e4rken die Pipeline der Arzneimittelentwicklung"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

K\u00fcrzlich lud das Copyright Clearance Center hochrangige F\u00fchrungskr\u00e4fte der Rechts- und Bibliotheksteams von Eli Lilly and Company<\/em> zu einer spannenden Podiumsdiskussion ein, w\u00e4hrend der die Diskussionsteilnehmer*innen dar\u00fcber berichteten, wie sie zusammenarbeiten, um Teams in den verschiedenen Phasen der Arzneimittelentwicklungspipeline zu st\u00e4rken.<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

Lesen Sie nachfolgend eine Zusammenfassung des Events, die zun\u00e4chst auf dem Blog des CCC erschien.<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

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Joining the panel from Eli Lilly and Company were:<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
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Christina Bennett McNew \u2013 Associate Director of Library Operations<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n
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Dr. John Rudolph \u2013 Associate Vice President and\u00a0Assistant General Counsel, Trademarks<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n
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Bruce Longbottom \u2013 Associate Vice President, Assistant General Counsel, Trademarks<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

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Using the power of biotechnology, chemistry, and genetic medicines, Lilly\u2019s scientists are advancing new discoveries to solve some of the world\u2019s most significant health challenges. From early research to pre-clinical \/ clinical drug development to communicating directly with healthcare professionals,\u00a0this webcast<\/a>\u00a0offered an inside look at how information management and copyright compliance come together at Lilly to accelerate innovation, promote collaboration, and improve patient outcomes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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Partnering Legal and Library<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n

Bruce Longbottom<\/strong>: \u201cWhen you get to the copyright area, it\u2019s a little bit different because there\u2019s a client and there\u2019s a lawyer, but there\u2019s also the Library because the advice is not just legal advice, but it\u2019s operational advice as well. You might have hundreds of subscription agreements covering thousands of journals or content sources, and you have to sort through all of that first. So that\u2019s really not a job for a lawyer or really not cost-effective or time-effective. That\u2019s really in the sweet spot of a librarian. We work together to provide answers that are meaningful for clients from a legal and operational basis. The Library serves as the first point of access for those clients. It\u2019s almost a triage function where the library uses CCC\u2019s RightFind<\/a> tool, as well as some copyright FAQs, some guides, some templates that legal has prepared, but in the library\u2019s hands or made available to clients. They really give that first line of support when it comes to copyright matters.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n

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Early Research: Accelerating Innovation<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n

Christine Bennett McNew<\/strong>: \u201cWhen developing new medicines, researchers require access to breaking information and want to get their hands on the right information at the right time. The Lilly Library provides access to scientific publications, congresses, meeting abstracts, as that\u2019s how the research community is sharing their information. We try to make sure that when we enter into agreements with publishers, we have licensing that fits our need as a pharmaceutical company. CCC\u2019s RightFind is a big part of how we manage this. It\u2019s a single place where people can view the subscription content. They can buy one-off items that are outside of our subscription, and they can see what copyright permissions are available. It helps our researchers gain quick, compliant access to the content they need. It\u2019s also self-service, so people can get answers around the clock, and around the globe. Having the content that the library provides for the scientist is just one part of the equation. Copyright is the other.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n

John Rudolph<\/strong>: \u201cOur Lilly scientists are curious people. They have a lot of questions, and their questions are part of their quest to discover how things work, so they can provide the next big breakthrough. Our Lilly researchers and developers, who are some 8,000 plus colleagues strong, require information to drive innovation. It can be tough for our clients to know or understand what\u2019s going on with respect to ownership \u2013 what content can they use? When can they use it? How can they use it? Regardless of whether it\u2019s a publication, a research tool, or a poster presentation from a conference they\u2019ve just attended, they need to answer that question. So, we try and enable them, and give them a simplistic decision tree.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n

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Pre-clinical \/ Clinical Development: Promoting Collaboration<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n

John Rudolph<\/strong>: \u201cWe help ensure that the various teams at Lilly have the rights to use the information that they and their teams need. But equally, Lilly does a lot of collaboration work with other companies, and this is an important part of Lilly\u2019s research and innovation. We do that because it\u2019s often necessary to collaborate with others to discover, develop, and bring to market new medicines to help improve lives. In conjunction with the Lilly Library and Christina\u2019s team, we in Legal need to look at what access to relevant information those companies have, what rights they need and what Lilly needs to access that information. So, we start with the terms of CCC\u2019s Collaboration Agreement, as well as any other relevant licensing agreements Lilly and the collaboration partner have with content providers. As part of making those determinations, we turn to the Library.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n

Christina Bennett McNew<\/strong>: \u201cWhen we get those questions, we may first check RightFind to see if we already have an existing Collaboration License. And if we don\u2019t, we ask the collaboration company if they have an Annual Copyright License with CCC. If they do, we can do an agreement with the Copyright Clearance Center putting down on paper that we are working together and [the two companies can enter a collaboration license and share content within project groups.] Sometimes we get questions about working with consortia. We ensure business partners know that companies need their own license, and we must remain compliant with our licensing terms.<\/p>

There\u2019s also a feature within RightFind we use called Shared Libraries, where anything a team or an individual orders gets placed into their library. They can move it to a shared library, and they can invite others to that library. Within that list of citations, they can tag the articles, they can attach metadata, and then when the other person goes to get the content, the RightFind system lets them know: \u2018yes, you have permission, you can see this,\u2019 or, \u2018you need to buy it, so you have a copyright compliant copy.\u2019\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n

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Regulatory Approval\/Commercial Use: Improving Patient Outcomes<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n

Bruce Longbottom<\/strong>: \u201cWe\u2019ve talked about innovation, we\u2019ve talked about collaboration, and now we\u2019re at the end of our pipeline where medicines are delivered to doctors and hospitals and patients. And at one of our recent company-wide meetings, I heard one of our top executives say that Lilly has an important role to play in that environment, which is communicating important medical content to those people, whether they\u2019re doctors, patients, or hospitals or others. And that\u2019s our job. Sometimes we\u2019re proactive in communicating that content such, such as by presenting slides at a conference. Sometimes we\u2019re more in reactive mode in communicating, such as when we get inquiries from doctors or hospitals or patients. We need to be able to communicate that content quickly and in a way that is copyright compliant. So how do we do that? Well, our relationship with CCC and their tools such as RightFind really helps us to do just that, and we work very closely with our Library.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n

John Rudolph<\/strong>: \u201cLilly works with healthcare practitioners and we like to provide information we think is meaningful to them and to their practice. In fact, we reach out to health practitioners and key opinion leaders to find out what they really do need because we certainly don\u2019t want to be in the business of creating content that isn\u2019t immediately useful.<\/p>

We have a really good recent example of this. One of our teams saw the need for a one-stop-shop answer to the question: which migraine assessment tool should I use in my clinical trial or in my practice? If you\u2019re familiar with migraines, you know that the pain that\u2019s associated with it can be a very individual thing. And as a result, the medical community in this therapeutic area has developed a lot of different clinical measures to try and meet the different needs for both patients and HCPs in their clinical settings, as well as in their private practices. So, being aware of and indeed finding the right assessment tools can be very time-consuming and quite frankly, very frustrating for practitioners.  We listened, we heard that, and we responded. The Lilly team worked with the Library, and in part with CCC through the RightFind tool, to develop a one-stop document \u2013 a catalogued collection of all the relevant tools that are referred to them.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n

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It will be made available with pertinent information relating to:<\/p>\n\n\n\n