Lexpert Special Editions

Lexpert Special Edition on Health Sciences

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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2 www.lexpert.ca Editorial fortuna favet fortibus ISSUE 22.03 > JUNE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Tim Wilbur SENIOR EDITOR Elizabeth Raymer EDITOR Zena Olijnyk PRODUCTION EDITOR Patricia Cancilla WRITERS Aidan Macnab, Lucy Saddleton, Bernise Carolino DESIGNER Ace Dequina PRESIDENT Tim Duce VP, MEDIA & CLIENT STRATEGY Dane Taylor SENIOR BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Steffanie Munroe BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Lynda Fenton NATIONAL ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Abhiram Prabhu CUSTOMER SUCCESS MANAGER Amie Suttie amie.suttie@keymedia.com Lexpert Special Edition Magazine is published six times a year. KEY MEDIA and the KEY MEDIA logo are trademarks of Key Media IP Limited, and used under licence by Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd. LEXPERT is a trademark of Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd. Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd 20 Duncan St. 3rd Floor, Toronto, ON M5H 3G8 Tel: (416) 609-8000 Fax: (416) 609-5840 Website: www.lexpert.ca All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted without written permission. Lexpert® Magazine is printed in Canada. PUBLICATION MAIL REGISTRATION NO. 41261516. ISSN1488-6553 Copyright© Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd All rights reserved. GST/HST#: 79989 8465 RC-0001 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR tim.wilbur@keymedia.com SUBSCRIPTIONS/ADDRESS CHANGES Contact: Donnabel Reyes at (647) 374-4536 ext. 243 or email donnabel.reyes@keymedia.com. Annual subscription costs C$175. To change your subscription address, please send your new address along with a copy of your mailing label(s) to the Subscription Dept., at the address indicated above. For all other circulation inquiries, please email Donnabel Reyes. T he pandemic has upended many things, but nowhere is this more evident than in health-care delivery. To describe what health sciences are experiencing as revolutionary is not an overstatement. Corporate lawyers who represent health and health tech companies have never been busier with IPOs, mergers and acquisitions. "It's been a phenomenal year in 2020, and we certainly expect the same for 2021," says Vanessa Grant at Norton Rose Fulbright LLP (p. 4). Health tech IPOs are on a tear. Quebec-based Repare erapeutics, a clinical-stage precision oncolog y company, raised US$253 million in its IPO on the Nasdaq Global Select Market. Two other Canadian biomed companies did likewise; Hamilton, Ont.-based Fusion Pharmaceuticals and Vancouver's AbCellera Biologics Inc. AbCellera's IPO pushed the total value of Canadian IPOs in 2020 to $5.72 billion, taking the country's IPO market to its highest level since 2014. Along with the investor interest, there have been rapid technological innovations on the ground. "All of a sudden, we're all way more comfortable doing things online, including people of all generations," says Sara Zborovski at Stikeman Elliott LLP (p. 10). "We're seeing a ton of new products, an increase in disease prevention technologies and lots of transactions in the M&A space." Along with these innovations is a dramatic change in the rules for how virtual health care is delivered and billed. Governments are revisiting billing codes, the scope of practice, compensation for digital health-care delivery and professional statutes for health-care professionals, says Laura Weinrib at Blake Cassels & Graydon LLP (p. 10). Ontario has enacted new billing codes for providing remote advice, and Alberta has already announced its plan to continue funding remote care in many circumstances. Apart from the human toll of the pandemic, though, COVID-19 has a dark side for the health-care sector. Burnout is prevalent among health professionals, and hospitals are delaying non-emergent care to prioritize COVID. An overreliance on virtual care can also result in a missed diagnosis since in-person meetings can uncover other symptoms and issues. Yet the revolution is here, and the lawyers who work in the health sciences industry are ready and able to help their clients navigate the uncertainty. Tim Wilbur, Editor-in-Chief Navigating the health sciences revolution

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