Most Powerful Women in Biotechnology and Healthcare
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted September 22, 2007 in Personalities with DNA
With much talk this past week that women science bloggers were not well represented in The Scientist article on favorite life science blogs, I thought it might be good to be reminded of how powerful women have become around the world. Late last month, Forbes.com (fond of making lists of the wealthy and fabulous) created a list of the world’s 100 most powerful women. Out of these, here are the women who have power in biotechnology and healthcare, not including government leaders who are obviously involved in peripheral ways.
17. Angela Braly - Chief executive, WellPoint
At the youthful age of 46, with only a few years of operational business experience, Braly has become the most powerful woman in health care. The 42,000-employee behemoth runs Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans in 14 states and its health plans have up to 60% market share.
24. Melinda Gates - Co-chairman, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
In addition to focusing on health issues and conquering AIDS, the $33.4 billion foundation Gates has run with her husband for the past 10 years began making grants in 2006 aimed at ending hunger and poverty.
32. Dr. Julie Louise Gerberding - Director, Center for Disease Control and Prevention
She runs the government agency that strives to track and control microscopic threats to the health of the U.S. population.
37. Margaret Chan, Director-general, World Health Organization
Chan has dedicated herself to minimizing epidemics before they happen by better disseminating information about diseases and outbreaks around the world.
46. Christine Poon - Vice chairman, Johnson & Johnson
Poon is responsible for managing the pharmaceutical, consumer drug and nutritional businesses of the company, in addition to overseeing its expanding R&D pipeline.
61. Susan Desmond-Hellman - President, product development, Genentech
Widely considered the most powerful woman in biotech, Desmond-Hellmann came to Genentech in 1995 after having designed the studies that got Taxol, a breakthrough chemotherapy, approved at Bristol-Myers Squibb. Within a year, Desmond-Hellmann became the company’s chief medical officer.
86. Stephanie A. Burns - Chairman, chief executive, Dow Corning
Burns rose through the ranks as a scientist at Dow Corning, becoming chief executive in February 2003. Today she oversees a company whose silicon-based technologies are inside a wide range of products, from baby wipes to highways.
Tags: genetics, genes, dna, biotechnology, health, healthcare, powerful women

Related Posts:
DNA Blogging at IBM’s HealthNex...
Eye on DNA Headlines for 26 August 2007...
Perceptions of Genetic Testing...
BRCA Gene Mutation Carriers Worry About Quality of Life...
Books About DNA: The Century of the Gene by Evelyn Fox Keller...
Eli Lilly Employees’ DNA Won’t Be Used Against Them...
Patients and Doctors Should Work Together in the Genome Revolution...
Please note that comments left using the form below will be publicly displayed. If you'd like to correspond with me privately, please email me at hsien@eyeondna.com.
If your comment doesn't show up immediately, it's probably in moderation. I will approve it as soon as I can! Thanks for your patience.
4 Comments »
Note: Posting will be sporadic while I'm on maternity leave.
Search Eye on DNA
- Bioethicist Arthur Caplan Says Corporate Greed Drives Genetic Testing Marketplace
- Chromosome 20 Involved in Male Pattern Baldness
- Smart Genetics Shuts Its Doors
- Eye on DNA Interview: Terry Carmichael, VP of Marketing & Sales at Consumer Genetics
- My Son, The Genetic Epidemiologist
- DNA for Terrorism
- Stephen Colbert’s DNA Headed for the International Space Station
- 23andMe DNA Tests for $399, Down From $999
- Digitized DNA Blasting Off Into Space
- Teaching Genetics Without the Mumbo Jumbo
MOST POPULAR
- DNA Toys: Ben 10 and Digimon Digivice
- 100 Facts About DNA
- Want a job? Submit your DNA
- Salaries for Jobs in Genetics
- What does DNA mean to you? #11
- What does DNA mean to you? #14
- 5 Cool Things You Can Do With Your DNA
- What does DNA mean to you? #10
- DNA Excerpt: Bringing Home the Birkin
- DNA Video: DNA Replication by The Backrow
- Bioethicist Arthur Caplan Says Corporate Greed Drives Genetic Testing Marketplace
10/16/2008 11:05 am
4 Comments - Chromosome 20 Involved in Male Pattern Baldness
10/14/2008 06:17 am
2 Comments - Smart Genetics Shuts Its Doors
10/13/2008 04:52 am
3 Comments - Eye on DNA Interview: Terry Carmichael, VP of Marketing & Sales at Consumer Genetics
10/03/2008 08:35 am
6 Comments - Is genetic testing useful?
10/06/2008 10:50 pm
3 Comments - Business of DNA
- DNA @ Google Answers
- DNA and Disease
- DNA and Genealogy
- DNA and the Law
- DNA Around the World
- DNA Fun
- DNA in General
- DNA Inventions and Gadgets
- DNA Lab Talk
- DNA Podcasts and Videos
- DNA Quotes and Excerpts
- DNA Testing
- Gene Therapy
- Genetic Engineering
- Genetically Modified Foods and Organisms
- Jobs Involving DNA
- Personalities with DNA
- Polls About DNA
RECENT POSTS
RECENT COMMENTS
CATEGORIES
ARCHIVE
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
RANDOMIZED BLOGROLL
- Herpes Blog
- ecosalon
- FuturePundit
- Philosophy of Genetics
- Genetizen
- GMO Africa
- QUEST Science Blog
- Microarray Blog
- Unbounded Medicine
- Dr. Deborah Serani
| We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here. |





Good to see this kind of list, but I’m sure it has some huge omissions. Dr. Janet Woodcock at the FDA is one that springs immediately to mind.
There are always omissions but we can always create new lists! Now there’s an idea….
Forbes forgot about me!

No worries, Lali. I already wrote to complain about them forgetting you. heh