Tomoya SHISHIDO

Tomoya SHISHIDO

1-3 Marunouchi 1-Chome, Chiyoda-ku Tokyo 100-8631, Japan



Biography

After having bachelor's degree in Japan, Mr. Tomoya SHISHIDO  has obtained post-graduation from IESE Business School in Barcelona, Spain, as MBA class of 2018. He was selected as a MBA sponsorship program of Mitsui&Co for his leadership potential. He has continued his professional career in the company, and is presently based in Tokyo. He has diverse healthcare professinal experiences in Mitsui & Co., including sales and product development for of tele-care business in Japan, strategic planning and business development of hospital business in Asia Pacific, and M&A projects and PMI planning of healthcare businesses in the globe.

 

Abstract

The three fundamental aims of healthcare system: access, quality and cost effectiveness, have been unmet in emering Asian countires, while cost effectiveness has been relatively prioritized in developed ones including Japan. To tackle this issue, as western developed countires had experienced, the healhtcare ecosystem has stared to be built, the sytem in which payors, providers, and patients are connected more efficently and effectively through intergrations, innovations and collaborations in Asian countries suhc as Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, India and China. The purose of this presentation is to summarize the recent trend and evolution of Asian healthcare ecosystem mainly from hospital and other providers’ perspectives. Mitsui&Co., one of the largest global congremerates in Japan, has been involved in such industrial evolution with its long term vision and commitment for private healthcare sector. It has contributed the development of healthare businesses such as provider services, manufacturing, and heatlhcare IT in Asian regions through capital and business partnerships with leading healthcare palyers such as IHH in Asia Pacific, DaVita Care in US and Panasonic Healhtcare in Japan. With these partners, Mitsui strives to build a healthcare ecosystem that integrates “Places”, “People”, “Products”, “Information” and “Services”, and enhances both quality and quantity of these five elements. Also, it’s trying to respond to the needs of patients, doctors and hospitals by filling the supply and demand gap and sharing best practice across the globe.