In “America’s   Growing Innovation Gap”, WSJ,  July 9,  2010, Eli Lilly CEO John C. Lechleiter, Ph.D.  writes that:
“…the   most important  elements are the seeds of innovation, which equate to  talented  people  and their ideas.”
He then suggests these people are “highly skilled immigrants” abroad.
In  my own circle of friends, I know American pharma industry  cast-offs who  are  both brilliant and talented.  One with  dual MS degrees in   mathematics and computer science from a major  university, one a skilled bioinformaticist I've had teach my healthcare informatics students as guest lecturer, one a  brilliant  programmer who could be considered the  grandfather of  computer image  manipulation, another with years of  expertise in pharma  knowledge discovery.
Then there's me – former Director of a Merck R&D support group and of The Merck Index - with degrees in medicine and post-doctoral specialization in biomedical informatics and information science, plus I'm an extra-class amateur radio licensee who understands complex technology at a level far beyond that of the usual pharmaceutical company worker.
Yet no donuts for us.  In recent years the pharmaceutical industry won’t grant any of us the courtesy even of an interview.
However, in  Mar. 2009 as I  documented here,   I did receive an email solicitation  from Lilly that read as follows ("sic's" are mine):
“Your Help Is  Requested for a Eli  Lilly Career  Opportunity! (sic)   I am a  member of the  Staffing Team at Eli Lilly. I  were referred to me (sic) as  person who  specializes in  pharmaceutical based informatics. I wanted to  reach out to  me (sic), to see  if you maybe able (sic) to  recommend anyone that could  qualify for  the below position (sic)."
I was not exactly inspired by this solicitation, perhaps written by one of the "highly skilled immigrants" Lechleiter covets.
Nor was I inspired by  the earlier solicitation I documented at my Jan.  2009 post "What,  Me Worry?  Lilly Fined Over Zyprexa,   Should  Be Fined For eRecruitment  Inanity As Well?"
A cause of the "innovation gap" may be leadership xenophilia, at the expense of the American born-and-raised scientists the pharma industry is so fond of discarding.
-- SS
 
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